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El. knyga: Multispecies Archaeology

  • Formatas: 390 pages
  • Serija: Archaeological Orientations
  • Išleidimo metai: 07-Feb-2018
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317480648
  • Formatas: 390 pages
  • Serija: Archaeological Orientations
  • Išleidimo metai: 07-Feb-2018
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317480648

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Multispecies Archaeology explores the issue of ecological and cultural novelty in the archaeological record from a multispecies perspective. Human exceptionalism and our place in nature have long been topics of academic consideration and archaeology has been synonymous with an axclusively human past, to the detriment of gaining a more nuanced understanding of one that is shared.

Encompassing more than just our relationships with animals, the book considers what we can learn about the human past without humans as the focus of the question. The volume digs deep into our understanding of interaction with plants, fungi, microbes, and even the fundamental building blocks of life, DNA. Multispecies Archaeology examines what it means to be humanand non-humanfrom a variety of perspectives, providing a new lens through which to view the past.

Challenging not only the subject or object of archaeology but also broader disciplinary identities, the volume is a landmark in this new and evolving area of scholarly interest.
List of illustrations
viii
Notes on contributors xii
Acknowledgements xiv
Introduction 1(8)
Suzanne E. Pilaar Birch
PART I Living in the Anthropocene
9(94)
1 Calabrian hounds and roasted ivory (or, swerving from anthropocentrism)
11(15)
Noah Heringman
2 The end of the `Neolithic'? At the emergence of the Anthropocene
26(21)
Christopher Witmore
3 Rehearsing the Anthropocene in microcosm: the palaeoenvironmental impacts of the Pacific rat (Rattus exulans) and other non-human species during island Neolithization
47(18)
Thomas P. Leppard
4 Trans-Holocene human impacts on California mussels (Mytilus californianus): historical ecological management implications from the Northern Channel Islands
65(20)
Breana Campbell
Todd J. Braje
Stephen G. Whitaker
5 Drift
85(18)
Pora Petursdottir
PART II Multispecies ecology of the built environment
103(96)
6 Symbiotic architectures
105(13)
Gavin Lucas
7 The eco-ecumene and multispecies history: the case of abandoned Protestant cemeteries in Poland
118(15)
Ewa Domanska
8 Ecologies of rock and art in northern New Mexico
133(21)
Benjamin Alberti
Severin Fowles
9 Oysters and mound-islands of Crystal River along the Central Gulf Coast of Florida
154(16)
Victor D. Thompson
Thomas J. Pluckhahn
10 Multispecies dynamics and the ecology of urban spaces in Roman antiquity
170(13)
Michael MacKinnon
11 Mammalian community assembly in ancient villages and towns in the Jordan Valley of Israel
183(16)
Nimrod Marom
Lior Weissbrod
PART III Agrarian commitments: towards an archaeology of symbiosis
199(72)
12 Animals and the Neolithic: cui bono?
201(13)
Terry O'Connor
13 Making space from the position of duty of care: Early Bronze Age human-sheep entanglements in Norway
214(16)
Kristin Armstrong Oma
14 The history of the human microbiome: insights from archaeology and ancient DNA
230(21)
Laura S. Weyrich
15 An archaeological telling of multispecies co-inhabitation: comments on the origins of agriculture and domestication narrative in Southwest Asia
251(20)
Brian Boyd
PART IV The ecology of movement
271(97)
16 Legs, feet and hooves: the seasonal roundup in Iceland
273(22)
Oscar Aldred
17 The rhythm of life: exploring the role of daily and seasonal rhythms in the development of human-nonhuman relationships in the British Early Mesolithic
295(15)
Nick J. Overton
18 Seasonal mobility and multispecies interactions in the Mesolithic northeastern Adriatic
310(23)
Suzanne E. Pilaar Birch
19 The role of ostrich in shaping the landscape use patterns of humans and hyenas on the southern coast of South Africa during the late Pleistocene
333(14)
Jamie Hodgkins
Petrus le Roux
Curtis W. Marean
Kirsty Penkman
Molly Crisp
Erich Fisher
Julia Lee-Thorp
20 Prey species movements and migrations in ecocultural landscapes: reconstructing late Pleistocene herbivore seasonal spatial behaviours
347(21)
Kate Britton
Index 368
Suzanne E. Pilaar Birch is Assistant Professor at the University of Georgia with a joint appointment in the departments of Anthropology and Geography. She combines zooarchaeology and biogeochemistry to investigate changes in diet, environment, mobility, and settlement systems spanning the late Pleistocene and early Holocene.