Phosphate and Lipid Soil Signatures in Russia, 2015-2017

The HUMANOR project is rooted in participatory action research taking place over many years in partnerships between scientists and stakeholders. Our innovative approach includes stakeholders in research aimed at more flexible and collaborative governance. The core of this project was to sample soils...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Anderson, D, University of Aberdeen
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-854957
id ftcessda:7ee4c7473b3cf7c7522862c3f2fdcab35c314ef32e78e03018a3307cfdc94582
record_format openpolar
spelling ftcessda:7ee4c7473b3cf7c7522862c3f2fdcab35c314ef32e78e03018a3307cfdc94582 2024-09-15T18:02:24+00:00 Phosphate and Lipid Soil Signatures in Russia, 2015-2017 Anderson, D, University of Aberdeen Russian Federation 2021-06-01T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-854957 en eng doi:10.5255/UKDA-SN-854957 854957 https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-854957 David Anderson, University of Aberdeen SOILS SOIL TYPES SOIL SCIENCE ENVIRONMENT 2021 Dataset 2021 ftcessda https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-854957 2024-07-03T23:32:44Z The HUMANOR project is rooted in participatory action research taking place over many years in partnerships between scientists and stakeholders. Our innovative approach includes stakeholders in research aimed at more flexible and collaborative governance. The core of this project was to sample soils for evidence of ancient reindeer husbandry. Ongoing climate change in the 21st century will instigate profound societal transformations in the 21st century. Yet, our knowledge of how such transformations can be achieved in an equitable and sustainable manner is limited. The HUMANOR project investigates historical transformations of mobile pastoralist social-ecological systems (SESs) for clues about which pathways may lead to such transformations. We comparatively study SESs that have undergone profound climatic fluctuations in the last centuries (indigenous Sami, Nenets, Evenki and Mongolian pastoralists) while maintaining their livelihoods through a host of incremental and qualitative shifts. Although these systems are increasingly being exposed to rapid climate change (e.g. the Arctic warming faster than lower latitudes), our understanding of SES response capacities is limited to adaptations within the current systems. We propose that a long-term focus on human-animal relations and the general socio-economic contexts may illustrate how people can deal with abrupt changes (including massive environmental shocks) and re-create these systems. Our focus is on the complex drivers of social-ecological transformations of recent decades and centuries that include climate variation, land use change, governance forms, institutional change (including legislation and social norms) and markets. We expect to show that although it is an ancient livelihood, still practiced across vast areas of N Eurasia, pastoralism is constantly undergoing shifts in the nexus of feedbacks between humans, animals and the environment. This comparative trans-disciplinary study is performed across several timescales (centennial changes since the ... Dataset Climate change Evenki nenets reindeer husbandry sami CESSDA DC Data Catalogue (Consortium of European Social Science Data Archives)
institution Open Polar
collection CESSDA DC Data Catalogue (Consortium of European Social Science Data Archives)
op_collection_id ftcessda
language English
topic SOILS
SOIL TYPES
SOIL SCIENCE
ENVIRONMENT
2021
spellingShingle SOILS
SOIL TYPES
SOIL SCIENCE
ENVIRONMENT
2021
Anderson, D, University of Aberdeen
Phosphate and Lipid Soil Signatures in Russia, 2015-2017
topic_facet SOILS
SOIL TYPES
SOIL SCIENCE
ENVIRONMENT
2021
description The HUMANOR project is rooted in participatory action research taking place over many years in partnerships between scientists and stakeholders. Our innovative approach includes stakeholders in research aimed at more flexible and collaborative governance. The core of this project was to sample soils for evidence of ancient reindeer husbandry. Ongoing climate change in the 21st century will instigate profound societal transformations in the 21st century. Yet, our knowledge of how such transformations can be achieved in an equitable and sustainable manner is limited. The HUMANOR project investigates historical transformations of mobile pastoralist social-ecological systems (SESs) for clues about which pathways may lead to such transformations. We comparatively study SESs that have undergone profound climatic fluctuations in the last centuries (indigenous Sami, Nenets, Evenki and Mongolian pastoralists) while maintaining their livelihoods through a host of incremental and qualitative shifts. Although these systems are increasingly being exposed to rapid climate change (e.g. the Arctic warming faster than lower latitudes), our understanding of SES response capacities is limited to adaptations within the current systems. We propose that a long-term focus on human-animal relations and the general socio-economic contexts may illustrate how people can deal with abrupt changes (including massive environmental shocks) and re-create these systems. Our focus is on the complex drivers of social-ecological transformations of recent decades and centuries that include climate variation, land use change, governance forms, institutional change (including legislation and social norms) and markets. We expect to show that although it is an ancient livelihood, still practiced across vast areas of N Eurasia, pastoralism is constantly undergoing shifts in the nexus of feedbacks between humans, animals and the environment. This comparative trans-disciplinary study is performed across several timescales (centennial changes since the ...
format Dataset
author Anderson, D, University of Aberdeen
author_facet Anderson, D, University of Aberdeen
author_sort Anderson, D, University of Aberdeen
title Phosphate and Lipid Soil Signatures in Russia, 2015-2017
title_short Phosphate and Lipid Soil Signatures in Russia, 2015-2017
title_full Phosphate and Lipid Soil Signatures in Russia, 2015-2017
title_fullStr Phosphate and Lipid Soil Signatures in Russia, 2015-2017
title_full_unstemmed Phosphate and Lipid Soil Signatures in Russia, 2015-2017
title_sort phosphate and lipid soil signatures in russia, 2015-2017
publishDate 2021
url https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-854957
op_coverage Russian Federation
genre Climate change
Evenki
nenets
reindeer husbandry
sami
genre_facet Climate change
Evenki
nenets
reindeer husbandry
sami
op_relation doi:10.5255/UKDA-SN-854957
854957
https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-854957
op_rights David Anderson, University of Aberdeen
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-854957
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