Geography, School of Geosciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9XP, United Kingdom.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2012 Mar 6;109(10):3664-9. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1113937109. Epub 2012 Feb 27.
In debates on societal collapse, Iceland occupies a position of precarious survival, defined by not becoming extinct, like Norse Greenland, but having endured, sometimes by the narrowest of margins. Classic decline narratives for late medieval to early modern Iceland stress compounding adversities, where climate, trade, political domination, unsustainable practices, and environmental degradation conspire with epidemics and volcanism to depress the Icelanders and turn the once-proud Vikings and Saga writers into one of Europe's poorest nations. A mainstay of this narrative is the impact of incidental setbacks such as plague and volcanism, which are seen to have compounded and exacerbated underlying structural problems. This research shows that this view is not correct. We present a study of landscape change that uses 15 precisely dated tephra layers spanning the whole 1,200-y period of human settlement in Iceland. These tephras have provided 2,625 horizons of known age within 200 stratigraphic sections to form a high-resolution spatial and temporal record of change. This finding shows short-term (50 y) declines in geomorphological activity after two major plagues in A.D. 15th century, variations that probably mirrored variations in the population. In the longer term, the geomorphological impact of climate changes from the 14th century on is delayed, and landscapes (as well as Icelandic society) exhibit resilience over decade to century timescales. This finding is not a simple consequence of depopulation but a reflection of how Icelandic society responded with a scaling back of their economy, conservation of core functionality, and entrenchment of the established order.
在关于社会崩溃的辩论中,冰岛的生存状况岌岌可危,它没有像北欧格陵兰那样灭绝,而是幸存了下来,尽管有时只是勉强幸存。从中世纪晚期到近代早期,经典的冰岛衰落叙事强调了各种不利因素的累积,包括气候、贸易、政治统治、不可持续的做法以及环境恶化,这些因素与流行病和火山活动一起,使冰岛人陷入困境,曾经骄傲的维京人和传奇作家沦为欧洲最贫穷的国家之一。这种叙述的一个主要观点是偶然挫折的影响,如瘟疫和火山活动,这些挫折被认为加剧和恶化了潜在的结构性问题。本研究表明,这种观点并不正确。我们展示了一项关于景观变化的研究,该研究使用了 15 个精确测年的火山灰层,涵盖了冰岛人类定居的整个 1200 年。这些火山灰在 200 个地层剖面中提供了 2625 个已知年龄的层位,形成了一个高分辨率的时空变化记录。这一发现表明,在公元 15 世纪两次大瘟疫之后,地貌活动在短期内(50 年)下降,这种变化可能反映了人口的变化。从长期来看,14 世纪以来气候变化对地貌的影响是滞后的,景观(以及冰岛社会)在数十年到数百年的时间尺度上表现出弹性。这一发现不是人口减少的简单结果,而是反映了冰岛社会如何通过缩减经济规模、保护核心功能和巩固现有秩序来做出反应。