Department of Anthropology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802;
Institutes of Energy and the Environment, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2020 Apr 14;117(15):8254-8262. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1914211117.
Climate change impacts island communities all over the world. Sea-level rise, an increase in the frequency and intensity of severe weather events, and changes in distribution and health of marine organisms are among the most significant processes affecting island communities worldwide. On islands of the Caribbean and southwestern Indian Ocean (SWIO), however, today's climate change impacts are magnified by historical environmental injustice and colonial legacies, which have heightened the vulnerability of human and other biotic communities. For some islands, archaeological and paleoecological research offers an important record of precolonial climate change and its interplay with human lives and landscapes. The archaeological record suggests strategies and mechanisms that can inform discussions of resilience in the face of climate change. We detail climate-related challenges facing island Caribbean and SWIO communities using archaeological and paleoecological evidence for past climate change and human response and argue that these cannot be successfully addressed without an understanding of the processes that have, over time, disrupted livelihoods, reshaped land- and seascapes, threatened intergenerational ecological knowledge transfer, and led to increased inequality and climate vulnerability.
气候变化影响着世界各地的岛屿社区。海平面上升、恶劣天气事件的频率和强度增加,以及海洋生物分布和健康状况的变化,是影响全球岛屿社区的最重要过程之一。然而,在加勒比岛屿和西南印度洋(SWIO),历史上的环境不公正和殖民遗留问题加剧了当今气候变化的影响,使人类和其他生物群落更加脆弱。对于一些岛屿来说,考古学和古生态学研究为了解殖民前气候变化及其与人类生活和景观的相互作用提供了重要记录。考古记录表明了一些策略和机制,这些策略和机制可以为应对气候变化的弹性提供信息。我们利用过去气候变化和人类应对的考古学和古生态学证据,详细说明了加勒比岛屿和 SWIO 社区面临的与气候相关的挑战,并认为,如果不了解这些过程,就无法成功应对这些挑战,这些过程随着时间的推移扰乱了生计、重塑了陆地和海洋景观、威胁了代际间的生态知识传承,并导致了不平等和气候脆弱性的加剧。