Landscape Structures and Human Evolutionary Ecology: space, scale and environmental patterning in Africa

Palaeoanthropologists and early prehistorians work hard to reconstruct ancient human-environment relationships and their influences on our lineage's ecology, biology and behaviour. These studies use a range of datasets (from ice-core records to animal bones and pollen grains to soils) and may f...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Isabelle C. Winder
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: University of York 2015
Subjects:
GIS
Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/f3004804948e4fba9752c8d5def6a5b0
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spelling ftdoajarticles:oai:doaj.org/article:f3004804948e4fba9752c8d5def6a5b0 2024-09-15T18:12:02+00:00 Landscape Structures and Human Evolutionary Ecology: space, scale and environmental patterning in Africa Isabelle C. Winder 2015-03-01T00:00:00Z https://doaj.org/article/f3004804948e4fba9752c8d5def6a5b0 EN eng University of York http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue38/winder_index.html https://doaj.org/toc/1363-5387 10.11141/ia.38.8 1363-5387 https://doaj.org/article/f3004804948e4fba9752c8d5def6a5b0 Internet Archaeology, Iss 38 (2015) landscape GIS hominin spatial structure Earth system human-environment interactions human evolution Archaeology CC1-960 article 2015 ftdoajarticles 2024-08-05T17:49:40Z Palaeoanthropologists and early prehistorians work hard to reconstruct ancient human-environment relationships and their influences on our lineage's ecology, biology and behaviour. These studies use a range of datasets (from ice-core records to animal bones and pollen grains to soils) and may focus on anything from the extremely local (site-specific) scale all the way up to global patterns. One aspect of past environments, however, remains obscure: we still know little about spatial patterning or landscape. This may be because well-known problems of taphonomy and spatial averaging in the fossil record prevent detailed reconstructions of palaeolandscapes, or it might simply be that landscapes have not received much attention. This article addresses that gap in our knowledge. It analyses the spatial structures of extant African environments at different scales across four regions of potential significance to early human evolution. It then explores how these patterns relate to the structure and function of the Earth system, as a means of increasing understanding of broad landscape patterns and the relationships between environmental variables and assessing the contributions this sort of data might make to studies of the past. It suggests, among other things, that the optimum scale for reconstructing ancient landscapes may be neither the global/continental scales typically employed by modellers nor the single-site scales used in palaeoanthropological research, but the 'local landscape' scale. At this scale, it may be possible to integrate data from typically large-scale climatic reconstructions and small-scale landform analyses to mutual benefit. Article in Journal/Newspaper ice core Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles
institution Open Polar
collection Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles
op_collection_id ftdoajarticles
language English
topic landscape
GIS
hominin
spatial structure
Earth system
human-environment interactions
human evolution
Archaeology
CC1-960
spellingShingle landscape
GIS
hominin
spatial structure
Earth system
human-environment interactions
human evolution
Archaeology
CC1-960
Isabelle C. Winder
Landscape Structures and Human Evolutionary Ecology: space, scale and environmental patterning in Africa
topic_facet landscape
GIS
hominin
spatial structure
Earth system
human-environment interactions
human evolution
Archaeology
CC1-960
description Palaeoanthropologists and early prehistorians work hard to reconstruct ancient human-environment relationships and their influences on our lineage's ecology, biology and behaviour. These studies use a range of datasets (from ice-core records to animal bones and pollen grains to soils) and may focus on anything from the extremely local (site-specific) scale all the way up to global patterns. One aspect of past environments, however, remains obscure: we still know little about spatial patterning or landscape. This may be because well-known problems of taphonomy and spatial averaging in the fossil record prevent detailed reconstructions of palaeolandscapes, or it might simply be that landscapes have not received much attention. This article addresses that gap in our knowledge. It analyses the spatial structures of extant African environments at different scales across four regions of potential significance to early human evolution. It then explores how these patterns relate to the structure and function of the Earth system, as a means of increasing understanding of broad landscape patterns and the relationships between environmental variables and assessing the contributions this sort of data might make to studies of the past. It suggests, among other things, that the optimum scale for reconstructing ancient landscapes may be neither the global/continental scales typically employed by modellers nor the single-site scales used in palaeoanthropological research, but the 'local landscape' scale. At this scale, it may be possible to integrate data from typically large-scale climatic reconstructions and small-scale landform analyses to mutual benefit.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Isabelle C. Winder
author_facet Isabelle C. Winder
author_sort Isabelle C. Winder
title Landscape Structures and Human Evolutionary Ecology: space, scale and environmental patterning in Africa
title_short Landscape Structures and Human Evolutionary Ecology: space, scale and environmental patterning in Africa
title_full Landscape Structures and Human Evolutionary Ecology: space, scale and environmental patterning in Africa
title_fullStr Landscape Structures and Human Evolutionary Ecology: space, scale and environmental patterning in Africa
title_full_unstemmed Landscape Structures and Human Evolutionary Ecology: space, scale and environmental patterning in Africa
title_sort landscape structures and human evolutionary ecology: space, scale and environmental patterning in africa
publisher University of York
publishDate 2015
url https://doaj.org/article/f3004804948e4fba9752c8d5def6a5b0
genre ice core
genre_facet ice core
op_source Internet Archaeology, Iss 38 (2015)
op_relation http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue38/winder_index.html
https://doaj.org/toc/1363-5387
10.11141/ia.38.8
1363-5387
https://doaj.org/article/f3004804948e4fba9752c8d5def6a5b0
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