Mobility as resilience capacity in northern Alpine Neolithic settlement communities

Resilience has recently become an insightful conceptual framework that helps scholars explore how communities respond to external shocks, such as environmental changes. In prehistoric archaeology, this notion has primarily been investigated using the Resilience Theory (RT) and the Adaptive Cycle mod...

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Main Authors: Heitz, Caroline, Hinz, Martin, Laabs, Julian, Hafner, Albert
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Victoire Press Ltd 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.48350/156772
https://boris.unibe.ch/156772/
id ftdatacite:10.48350/156772
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spelling ftdatacite:10.48350/156772 2023-05-15T16:30:37+02:00 Mobility as resilience capacity in northern Alpine Neolithic settlement communities Heitz, Caroline Hinz, Martin Laabs, Julian Hafner, Albert 2021 https://dx.doi.org/10.48350/156772 https://boris.unibe.ch/156772/ unknown Victoire Press Ltd restricted access publisher holds copyright http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec 930 History of ancient world to ca. 499 Text article-journal journal article ScholarlyArticle 2021 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.48350/156772 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Resilience has recently become an insightful conceptual framework that helps scholars explore how communities respond to external shocks, such as environmental changes. In prehistoric archaeology, this notion has primarily been investigated using the Resilience Theory (RT) and the Adaptive Cycle model (AC), developed by Gunderson and Holling, which are applied to adaptive systems in order to understand the source and role of change. However, such systems-theoretical approaches, which derive from ecology and psychology, bear the danger of leading to a top-down application of deductive models when appropriated to the fragmented archaeological sources. In other words, the risk is to assume the RT and AC model first and then to fit archaeological data within those assumptions. In this paper, we propose an alternative, inductive bottom-up approach in which we define resilience as a set of adaptive capacities grounded in social practices that enabled communities to cope with and respond to challenges. We use the Neolithic wetland sites from the Three-Lakes Region in the northern Alpine foreland of western Switzerland as a case study. These sites provide an abundance of archaeological and palaeoecological information, which can be used to examine the resilience of settlement communities to climate fluctuations. We will evaluate whether a causal relationship might have existed between climate changes in the period between 3600 and 3200 BCE and an observable decline of settlement activities on the shores of the large lakes. In addition to year-accurate reconstructions of settlement histories, we will apply statistical significance tests on archaeological and palaeoclimatic time series to question the correlation and causality between settlement activities and climate fluctuations. Besides the settlement frequency curve, we will use the radioactive beryllium-10 isotope (Be10) content in the GISP2 ice core from the Greenland Ice Sheet and the δ18O values of well-dated speleothems as proxies for temperature and precipitation, respectively. The inferred hypothesis, i.e. that periodically rising lake levels led to the flooding of former inhabitable spaces on the lakes’ shore zones and forced communities to relocate their settlements to the hinterland, will further be tested. Therefore, we apply multivariate statistics to pollen data to evaluate human influence on vegetation (land clearing) taken as settlement activity beyond the shores of large lakes. In addition, we examine the relevance of transformations in pottery styles as further indicators for spatial mobility. Text Greenland ice core Ice Sheet DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Greenland
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic 930 History of ancient world to ca. 499
spellingShingle 930 History of ancient world to ca. 499
Heitz, Caroline
Hinz, Martin
Laabs, Julian
Hafner, Albert
Mobility as resilience capacity in northern Alpine Neolithic settlement communities
topic_facet 930 History of ancient world to ca. 499
description Resilience has recently become an insightful conceptual framework that helps scholars explore how communities respond to external shocks, such as environmental changes. In prehistoric archaeology, this notion has primarily been investigated using the Resilience Theory (RT) and the Adaptive Cycle model (AC), developed by Gunderson and Holling, which are applied to adaptive systems in order to understand the source and role of change. However, such systems-theoretical approaches, which derive from ecology and psychology, bear the danger of leading to a top-down application of deductive models when appropriated to the fragmented archaeological sources. In other words, the risk is to assume the RT and AC model first and then to fit archaeological data within those assumptions. In this paper, we propose an alternative, inductive bottom-up approach in which we define resilience as a set of adaptive capacities grounded in social practices that enabled communities to cope with and respond to challenges. We use the Neolithic wetland sites from the Three-Lakes Region in the northern Alpine foreland of western Switzerland as a case study. These sites provide an abundance of archaeological and palaeoecological information, which can be used to examine the resilience of settlement communities to climate fluctuations. We will evaluate whether a causal relationship might have existed between climate changes in the period between 3600 and 3200 BCE and an observable decline of settlement activities on the shores of the large lakes. In addition to year-accurate reconstructions of settlement histories, we will apply statistical significance tests on archaeological and palaeoclimatic time series to question the correlation and causality between settlement activities and climate fluctuations. Besides the settlement frequency curve, we will use the radioactive beryllium-10 isotope (Be10) content in the GISP2 ice core from the Greenland Ice Sheet and the δ18O values of well-dated speleothems as proxies for temperature and precipitation, respectively. The inferred hypothesis, i.e. that periodically rising lake levels led to the flooding of former inhabitable spaces on the lakes’ shore zones and forced communities to relocate their settlements to the hinterland, will further be tested. Therefore, we apply multivariate statistics to pollen data to evaluate human influence on vegetation (land clearing) taken as settlement activity beyond the shores of large lakes. In addition, we examine the relevance of transformations in pottery styles as further indicators for spatial mobility.
format Text
author Heitz, Caroline
Hinz, Martin
Laabs, Julian
Hafner, Albert
author_facet Heitz, Caroline
Hinz, Martin
Laabs, Julian
Hafner, Albert
author_sort Heitz, Caroline
title Mobility as resilience capacity in northern Alpine Neolithic settlement communities
title_short Mobility as resilience capacity in northern Alpine Neolithic settlement communities
title_full Mobility as resilience capacity in northern Alpine Neolithic settlement communities
title_fullStr Mobility as resilience capacity in northern Alpine Neolithic settlement communities
title_full_unstemmed Mobility as resilience capacity in northern Alpine Neolithic settlement communities
title_sort mobility as resilience capacity in northern alpine neolithic settlement communities
publisher Victoire Press Ltd
publishDate 2021
url https://dx.doi.org/10.48350/156772
https://boris.unibe.ch/156772/
geographic Greenland
geographic_facet Greenland
genre Greenland
ice core
Ice Sheet
genre_facet Greenland
ice core
Ice Sheet
op_rights restricted access
publisher holds copyright
http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
op_doi https://doi.org/10.48350/156772
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