Human–environment interactions at a short-lived Arctic mine and the long-term response of the local tundra vegetation

Arctic mining has a bad reputation because the extractive industry is often responsible for a suite of environmental problems. Yet, few studies explore the gap between untouched tundra and messy megaproject from a historical perspective. Our paper focuses on Advent City as a case study of the emerge...

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Published in:Polar Record
Main Authors: Kruse, Frigga, Nobles, Gary R., de Jong, Martha, van Bodegom, Rosanne M. K., van Oortmerssen, G. J. M. (Gert), Kooistra, Jildou, van den Berg, Mathilde, Küchelmann, Hans Christian, Schepers, Mans, Leusink, Elisabeth H. P., Cornelder, Bardo A., Kruijer, J. D. (Hans), Dee, Michael W.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11370/a5542783-31d2-4e01-b7fa-243377b55376
https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/a5542783-31d2-4e01-b7fa-243377b55376
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0032247420000418
https://pure.rug.nl/ws/files/156126226/78456370_6125511_2021_Kruse_et_al_Polar_Record.pdf
id ftunigroningenpu:oai:pure.rug.nl:publications/a5542783-31d2-4e01-b7fa-243377b55376
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spelling ftunigroningenpu:oai:pure.rug.nl:publications/a5542783-31d2-4e01-b7fa-243377b55376 2024-06-23T07:44:58+00:00 Human–environment interactions at a short-lived Arctic mine and the long-term response of the local tundra vegetation Kruse, Frigga Nobles, Gary R. de Jong, Martha van Bodegom, Rosanne M. K. van Oortmerssen, G. J. M. (Gert) Kooistra, Jildou van den Berg, Mathilde Küchelmann, Hans Christian Schepers, Mans Leusink, Elisabeth H. P. Cornelder, Bardo A. Kruijer, J. D. (Hans) Dee, Michael W. 2021 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/11370/a5542783-31d2-4e01-b7fa-243377b55376 https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/a5542783-31d2-4e01-b7fa-243377b55376 https://doi.org/10.1017/S0032247420000418 https://pure.rug.nl/ws/files/156126226/78456370_6125511_2021_Kruse_et_al_Polar_Record.pdf eng eng https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/a5542783-31d2-4e01-b7fa-243377b55376 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Kruse , F , Nobles , G R , de Jong , M , van Bodegom , R M K , van Oortmerssen , G J M , Kooistra , J , van den Berg , M , Küchelmann , H C , Schepers , M , Leusink , E H P , Cornelder , B A , Kruijer , J D & Dee , M W 2021 , ' Human–environment interactions at a short-lived Arctic mine and the long-term response of the local tundra vegetation ' , Polar Record , vol. 57 , e3 . https://doi.org/10.1017/S0032247420000418 Svalbard Mining Archaeology Environmental impact Tundra vegetation article 2021 ftunigroningenpu https://doi.org/10.1017/S0032247420000418 2024-06-10T16:58:57Z Arctic mining has a bad reputation because the extractive industry is often responsible for a suite of environmental problems. Yet, few studies explore the gap between untouched tundra and messy megaproject from a historical perspective. Our paper focuses on Advent City as a case study of the emergence of coal mining in Svalbard (Norway) coupled with the onset of mining-related environmental change. After short but intensive human activity (1904–1908), the ecosystem had a century to respond, and we observe a lasting impact on the flora in particular. With interdisciplinary contributions from historical archaeology, archaeozoology, archaeobotany and botany, supplemented by stable isotope analysis, we examine 1) which human activities initially asserted pressure on the Arctic environment, 2) whether the miners at Advent City were “eco-conscious,” for example whether they showed concern for the environment and 3) how the local ecosystem reacted after mine closure and site abandonment. Among the remains of typical mining infrastructure, we prioritised localities that revealed the subtleties of long-term anthropogenic impact. Significant pressure resulted from landscape modifications, the import of non-native animals and plants, hunting and fowling, and the indiscriminate disposal of waste material. Where it was possible to identify individual inhabitants, these shared an economic attitude of waste not, want not, but they did not hold the environment in high regard. Ground clearances, animal dung and waste dumps continue to have an effect after a hundred years. The anthropogenic interference with the fell field led to habitat creation, especially for vascular plants. The vegetation cover and biodiversity were high, but we recorded no exotic or threatened plant species. Impacted localities generally showed a reduction of the natural patchiness of plant communities, and highly eutrophic conditions were unsuitable for liverworts and lichens. Supplementary isotopic analysis of animal bones added data to the marine ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Advent City Arctic Arctic Polar Record Svalbard Tundra University of Groningen research database Arctic Norway Svalbard Polar Record 57
institution Open Polar
collection University of Groningen research database
op_collection_id ftunigroningenpu
language English
topic Svalbard
Mining
Archaeology
Environmental impact
Tundra vegetation
spellingShingle Svalbard
Mining
Archaeology
Environmental impact
Tundra vegetation
Kruse, Frigga
Nobles, Gary R.
de Jong, Martha
van Bodegom, Rosanne M. K.
van Oortmerssen, G. J. M. (Gert)
Kooistra, Jildou
van den Berg, Mathilde
Küchelmann, Hans Christian
Schepers, Mans
Leusink, Elisabeth H. P.
Cornelder, Bardo A.
Kruijer, J. D. (Hans)
Dee, Michael W.
Human–environment interactions at a short-lived Arctic mine and the long-term response of the local tundra vegetation
topic_facet Svalbard
Mining
Archaeology
Environmental impact
Tundra vegetation
description Arctic mining has a bad reputation because the extractive industry is often responsible for a suite of environmental problems. Yet, few studies explore the gap between untouched tundra and messy megaproject from a historical perspective. Our paper focuses on Advent City as a case study of the emergence of coal mining in Svalbard (Norway) coupled with the onset of mining-related environmental change. After short but intensive human activity (1904–1908), the ecosystem had a century to respond, and we observe a lasting impact on the flora in particular. With interdisciplinary contributions from historical archaeology, archaeozoology, archaeobotany and botany, supplemented by stable isotope analysis, we examine 1) which human activities initially asserted pressure on the Arctic environment, 2) whether the miners at Advent City were “eco-conscious,” for example whether they showed concern for the environment and 3) how the local ecosystem reacted after mine closure and site abandonment. Among the remains of typical mining infrastructure, we prioritised localities that revealed the subtleties of long-term anthropogenic impact. Significant pressure resulted from landscape modifications, the import of non-native animals and plants, hunting and fowling, and the indiscriminate disposal of waste material. Where it was possible to identify individual inhabitants, these shared an economic attitude of waste not, want not, but they did not hold the environment in high regard. Ground clearances, animal dung and waste dumps continue to have an effect after a hundred years. The anthropogenic interference with the fell field led to habitat creation, especially for vascular plants. The vegetation cover and biodiversity were high, but we recorded no exotic or threatened plant species. Impacted localities generally showed a reduction of the natural patchiness of plant communities, and highly eutrophic conditions were unsuitable for liverworts and lichens. Supplementary isotopic analysis of animal bones added data to the marine ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Kruse, Frigga
Nobles, Gary R.
de Jong, Martha
van Bodegom, Rosanne M. K.
van Oortmerssen, G. J. M. (Gert)
Kooistra, Jildou
van den Berg, Mathilde
Küchelmann, Hans Christian
Schepers, Mans
Leusink, Elisabeth H. P.
Cornelder, Bardo A.
Kruijer, J. D. (Hans)
Dee, Michael W.
author_facet Kruse, Frigga
Nobles, Gary R.
de Jong, Martha
van Bodegom, Rosanne M. K.
van Oortmerssen, G. J. M. (Gert)
Kooistra, Jildou
van den Berg, Mathilde
Küchelmann, Hans Christian
Schepers, Mans
Leusink, Elisabeth H. P.
Cornelder, Bardo A.
Kruijer, J. D. (Hans)
Dee, Michael W.
author_sort Kruse, Frigga
title Human–environment interactions at a short-lived Arctic mine and the long-term response of the local tundra vegetation
title_short Human–environment interactions at a short-lived Arctic mine and the long-term response of the local tundra vegetation
title_full Human–environment interactions at a short-lived Arctic mine and the long-term response of the local tundra vegetation
title_fullStr Human–environment interactions at a short-lived Arctic mine and the long-term response of the local tundra vegetation
title_full_unstemmed Human–environment interactions at a short-lived Arctic mine and the long-term response of the local tundra vegetation
title_sort human–environment interactions at a short-lived arctic mine and the long-term response of the local tundra vegetation
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/11370/a5542783-31d2-4e01-b7fa-243377b55376
https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/a5542783-31d2-4e01-b7fa-243377b55376
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0032247420000418
https://pure.rug.nl/ws/files/156126226/78456370_6125511_2021_Kruse_et_al_Polar_Record.pdf
geographic Arctic
Norway
Svalbard
geographic_facet Arctic
Norway
Svalbard
genre Advent City
Arctic
Arctic
Polar Record
Svalbard
Tundra
genre_facet Advent City
Arctic
Arctic
Polar Record
Svalbard
Tundra
op_source Kruse , F , Nobles , G R , de Jong , M , van Bodegom , R M K , van Oortmerssen , G J M , Kooistra , J , van den Berg , M , Küchelmann , H C , Schepers , M , Leusink , E H P , Cornelder , B A , Kruijer , J D & Dee , M W 2021 , ' Human–environment interactions at a short-lived Arctic mine and the long-term response of the local tundra vegetation ' , Polar Record , vol. 57 , e3 . https://doi.org/10.1017/S0032247420000418
op_relation https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/a5542783-31d2-4e01-b7fa-243377b55376
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1017/S0032247420000418
container_title Polar Record
container_volume 57
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