A Matter of Scale: Responses to Landscape Changes in the Oslo Fjord, Norway, in the Mesolithic

被引:4
|
作者
Mjaerum, Axel [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Oslo, Dept Archaeol, Museum Cultural Hist, Oslo, Norway
来源
OPEN ARCHAEOLOGY | 2022年 / 8卷 / 01期
关键词
environmental changes; adaptation; relocation strategies; population dynamics; site counts; Scandinavia; ADAPTATION; STRATEGIES; SETTLEMENT;
D O I
10.1515/opar-2022-0225
中图分类号
K85 [文物考古];
学科分类号
0601 ;
摘要
Present-day global warming has great consequences, both for individuals and on a larger scale for society as a whole. However, environmental changes also affected everyday life in the past. The purpose of this article is to apply perspectives developed in studies of how contemporary societies adapt to shore-level changes and to use this insight in a study of the way Mesolithic populations handled a situation of large land uplift. More specifically, the author discusses four common adaptation strategies devised to cope with changing sea level, both on a site level and on a regional scale - to accommodate, relocate, protect, or not respond to the changing environment. In the Oslo Fjord in Norway, the shorelines moved from approximately 200-40 m above the present-day sea level in the period 9300-3900 cal BC, caused by the strong post-glacial rebound. Along the shores lived populations that based much of their life on the local marine resources. Building on information from the large habitation area Haysjodalen and a statistical analysis of 529 critically selected sites in the region, the author concludes that single sites were systematically accommodated or relocated when the distance to the shores receded. However, sea level changes caused more dramatic regional landscape transformation and a less bountiful environment c. 5000 cal BC, with a period of maladaptation and a subsequent population collapse as a result. Like modem societies facing human-caused climate changes, the Mesolithic population had difficulties in handling the need for large-scale shifts in their society.
引用
收藏
页码:62 / 84
页数:23
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Structural changes in a primeval beech forest at the landscape scale
    Stillhard, Jonas
    Hobi, Martina L.
    Brang, Peter
    Braendli, Urs-Beat
    Korol, Mykola
    Pokynchereda, Vasyl
    Abegg, Meinrad
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2022, 504
  • [42] Changes of Eroded Landscape Pattern Based on Optimum Scale
    Chen, Zhibiao
    Zou, Aiping
    Chen, Zhiqiang
    Chen, Lihui
    2009 17TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON GEOINFORMATICS, VOLS 1 AND 2, 2009, : 1105 - 1110
  • [43] SEWAGE HISTORY IN THE ANOXIC SEDIMENTS OF THE FJORD NORDASVANNET, WESTERN NORWAY .2. THE ORIGIN OF THE SEDIMENTED ORGANIC-MATTER FRACTION
    PAETZEL, M
    SCHRADER, H
    NORSK GEOLOGISK TIDSSKRIFT, 1995, 75 (2-3): : 146 - 155
  • [44] An investigation of water and matter balance on the meso-landscape scale: A hierarchical approach for landscape research
    Steinhardt, U
    Volk, M
    LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 2002, 17 (01) : 1 - 12
  • [45] An investigation of water and matter balance on the meso-landscape scale: A hierarchical approach for landscape research
    Uta Steinhardt
    Martin Volk
    Landscape Ecology, 2002, 17 : 1 - 12
  • [46] Lateglacial and Holocene terrestrial and marine proxies reflecting climate changes in the Malangen fjord area, Norway, northeast North Atlantic
    Sharapova, Alla
    Hald, Morten
    Husum, Katrine
    Jensen, Christin
    BOREAS, 2008, 37 (03) : 444 - 457
  • [47] Vegetation responses to late-glacial climate changes in western Norway
    Birks, Hilary H.
    Birks, H. John B.
    PRESLIA, 2013, 85 (03) : 215 - 237
  • [48] Catchment transit times and landscape controls-does scale matter?
    Hrachowitz, M.
    Soulsby, C.
    Tetzlaff, D.
    Speed, M.
    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2010, 24 (01) : 117 - 125
  • [50] A review of threshold responses of birds to landscape changes across the world
    Melo, Isabel
    Manuel Ochoa-Quintero, Jose
    Roque, Fabio de Oliveira
    Dalsgaard, Bo
    JOURNAL OF FIELD ORNITHOLOGY, 2018, 89 (04) : 303 - 314