Collaborative Research; The Role Of Fuelwood Resources In A Traditional Society
合作研究;
基本信息
- 批准号:1523269
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 2.83万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:Standard Grant
- 财政年份:2015
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2015-07-15 至 2018-06-30
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:
项目摘要
As today's climate fluctuates and severe weather events occur more frequently, sustainability of resources is a prominent concern, not just of scientists but also of government leaders and the public. Humans have adjusted to climate changes in the past. Why have some of these adjustments been more resilient and sustainable than others? Archaeologists are uniquely positioned to provide insights on sustainability because their studies provide information over many centuries. In some cases, archaeological data permit tracking of the development of human societies from small-scale egalitarian groups to large-scale socially and politically complex societies. Inherent to this transition is reliance on and the sustainability of natural resources, including the development of food storage economies. The long-term trajectory of natural resource use and management in this context is pivotal. Dr. Lee Newsom of the Pennsylvania State University, along with colleagues at the Florida Museum of Natural History, will undertake archaeological research on coastal fisher-gatherer-hunter societies that lived in southern Florida for several millennia. The research emphasizes the role of fuelwood resources as a means to preserve surplus food in an emerging storage economy. This research will examine the influence of a past society on forest resources. Insights into the legacy effects of sustained wood use on the modern forest landscape/seascape, and generally the influence of humans on coastal environments, will be of interest to other academic disciplines and to planners. Mangrove forests are endangered world-wide and this investigation will further inform ecologists about their resilience at the edge of their range. Modern management and conservation of coastal forest resources can benefit from the long-term record, as policy makers consider further habitat disruption and loss from coastal development, sea level rise, and global change. The project focuses on the Calusa Indians and their predecessors in southern Florida, using ethnohistoric records and especially archaeological evidence. The research team will test the hypothesis that the development of a food storage economy was a critical factor underlying cultural complexity, and that fuelwoods from coastal mangrove forests were an indispensable and sustainable natural resource inherent to this process. The team will undertake intensive wood-anatomical analysis of charcoal excavated from archaeological sites in the Calusa core area along the southwest coast, emphasizing the characteristics of the fuel supply, the influence of environmental perturbations on the availability of wood, and the role of human agency and influence over local forest resources. Basic wood data collection will include taxonomic assignments, observations on anatomical variation, age, growth form, and growth rate. The research will incorporate modern forest ecological data and experimental methods to establish the hypothetical limitations of the fuel supply. Relevant paleoecological and archaeological data will provide temporal and cultural resolution. All data can be compared in order to test hypotheses on the effects of sustained fuelwood selection and use, the impact of natural disruptions to the fuel supply, and the potential for management.
随着当今气候的波动和恶劣天气事件的频繁发生,资源的可持续性不仅是科学家,而且是政府领导人和公众的一个突出问题。人类已经适应了过去的气候变化。为什么其中一些调整比其他调整更具弹性和可持续性?考古学家在提供可持续性见解方面具有独特的地位,因为他们的研究提供了许多世纪的信息。在某些情况下,考古学数据可以追踪人类社会的发展,从小规模的平等主义群体到大规模的社会和政治复杂的社会。这一转变的内在原因是依赖自然资源和自然资源的可持续性,包括发展粮食储存经济。在这方面,自然资源使用和管理的长期轨迹至关重要。宾夕法尼亚州立大学的李·纽森博士将与佛罗里达自然历史博物馆的同事沿着,对居住在佛罗里达南部数千年的沿海采集狩猎社会进行考古研究。这项研究强调薪材资源作为在新兴仓储经济中保存剩余粮食的一种手段的作用。这项研究将探讨过去社会对森林资源的影响。深入了解持续使用木材对现代森林景观/海景的影响,以及人类对沿海环境的影响,将是其他学科和规划者感兴趣的。红树林在世界范围内濒临灭绝,这项调查将进一步告知生态学家他们在其范围边缘的恢复力。沿海森林资源的现代管理和保护可以从长期记录中受益,因为政策制定者考虑到沿海开发、海平面上升和全球变化造成的栖息地进一步破坏和丧失。该项目的重点是卡卢萨印第安人和他们的前辈在南部佛罗里达,使用民族历史记录,特别是考古证据。研究小组将检验以下假设:粮食储存经济的发展是文化复杂性的一个关键因素,沿海红树林的薪材是这一过程所固有的不可或缺和可持续的自然资源。该小组将对从西南海岸沿着Calusa核心地区考古遗址挖掘出的木炭进行密集的木材解剖学分析,强调燃料供应的特点、环境扰动对木材供应的影响以及人类机构的作用和对当地森林资源的影响。基本的木材数据收集将包括分类分配,解剖变异,年龄,生长形式和生长速度的观察。这项研究将结合现代森林生态数据和实验方法,以确定燃料供应的假设限制。相关的古生态学和考古学数据将提供时间和文化分辨率。所有数据都可以进行比较,以检验关于持续选择和使用薪材的影响、自然中断对燃料供应的影响以及管理潜力的假设。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
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Karen Walker其他文献
Breaking the Cycle of Nursing Chaos: The Need to Address the Nursing Shortage.
打破护理混乱的循环:解决护理短缺问题的必要性。
- DOI:
- 发表时间:
2023 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:
Gail A Bagwell;Sandra K Cesario;Debbie Fraser;Carole Kenner;Karen Walker - 通讯作者:
Karen Walker
Understanding challenges around implementation of specialist service recommendations for obsessive–compulsive disorder
了解强迫症专家服务建议的实施挑战
- DOI:
10.1192/pb.41.2.121 - 发表时间:
2017 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:2.6
- 作者:
Karen Walker;D. Christmas - 通讯作者:
D. Christmas
The role of coping in the relationship between depression and illness severity in chronic fatigue syndrome.
应对在慢性疲劳综合症抑郁与疾病严重程度之间关系中的作用。
- DOI:
- 发表时间:
2009 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:
Karen Walker;H. Lindner;M. Noonan - 通讯作者:
M. Noonan
Meta-Estimation of Araucanian Herring, Strangomera bentincki (Norman, 1936), Biological Indicators in the Central-South Zone of Chile (32°–47° LS)
阿劳卡尼亚鲱鱼、Strangomera Bentincki 的元估计(Norman,1936),智利中南地区的生物指标(32°–47° LS)
- DOI:
10.3389/fmars.2022.886321 - 发表时间:
2022 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:1.9
- 作者:
Antonio Aranis;Rolando de la Cruz;Carlos Montenegro;Marlene Ramírez;L. Caballero;Alejandra Gómez;Karen Walker - 通讯作者:
Karen Walker
Karen Walker的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Karen Walker', 18)}}的其他基金
Collaborative Research: Late Holocene Climate Archives Preserved in Archaeological Shells
合作研究:考古贝壳中保存的全新世晚期气候档案
- 批准号:
0602420 - 财政年份:2006
- 资助金额:
$ 2.83万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
Collaborative Research: Calibration of Sr:Ca and d18O Proxies of the Southern Quahog, Mercenaria Campechiensis, to Reconstruct Late Holocene Climate, SW Florida
合作研究:校准南方圆蛤 (Mercenaria Campechiensis) 的 Sr:Ca 和 d18O 代理,以重建佛罗里达州西南部全新世晚期气候
- 批准号:
0317578 - 财政年份:2003
- 资助金额:
$ 2.83万 - 项目类别:
Continuing Grant
Computerized Instruction, Data Acquisition, and Analysis in Undergraduate science and Mathematics Laboratories
本科生科学和数学实验室的计算机化教学、数据采集和分析
- 批准号:
9751625 - 财政年份:1997
- 资助金额:
$ 2.83万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
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