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逆势而上:边缘环境中的人口韧性。

Bucking the trend: Population resilience in a marginal environment.

机构信息

Archaeology & Palaeoecology: School of Natural and Built Environment, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom.

Geography: School of Natural and Built Environment, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2022 Apr 27;17(4):e0266680. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0266680. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

Evaluating the impact of environmental changes on past societies is frequently confounded by the difficulty of establishing cause-and-effect at relevant scales of analysis. Commonly, paleoenvironmental records lack the temporal and spatial resolution to link them with historic events, yet there remains a tendency to correlate climate change and cultural transformations on the basis of their seeming synchronicity. Here, we challenge perceptions of societal vulnerability to past environmental change using an integrated paleoenvironmental and land-use history of a remote upland site in the north of Ireland. We present a high-resolution, multi-proxy record that illustrates extended occupation of this marginal locality throughout the climate oscillations of the last millennium. Importantly, historically-dated volcanic ash markers enable us to pinpoint precisely in our record the timing of major national demographic crises such as the Black Death and the European, Irish and Great (Potato) Famines. We find no evidence that climate downturns or demographic collapses had an enduring impact on the use of the uplands: either the community escaped the effects of these events, or population levels recovered rapidly enough (within a generation) to leave no appreciable mark on the palaeoenvironmental record. Our findings serve to illustrate the spatial complexity of human activity that can enable communities to withstand or quickly bounce back from largescale calamities. In neglecting to consider such local-scale variability in social and economic organization, generalized models of societal collapse risk overplaying the vulnerability of populations to long- and short-term ecological stressors to the detriment of identifying the social constraints that influence a population's response to change.

摘要

评估环境变化对过去社会的影响常常因难以在相关分析尺度上确定因果关系而受到阻碍。通常,古环境记录在时间和空间上的分辨率不足以将其与历史事件联系起来,但人们仍然倾向于根据气候变化和文化转型的表面同步性来进行相关性分析。在这里,我们利用北爱尔兰北部一个偏远高地地点的综合古环境和土地利用历史来挑战人们对过去环境变化的社会脆弱性的认识。我们提出了一个高分辨率、多指标的记录,说明了在过去一千年的气候振荡中,这个边缘地区的长期居住情况。重要的是,具有历史年代的火山灰标记使我们能够在记录中准确地确定重大国家人口危机(如黑死病和欧洲、爱尔兰和大(土豆)饥荒)的时间。我们没有证据表明气候下降或人口崩溃对高地的使用有持久影响:要么社区逃脱了这些事件的影响,要么人口水平恢复得足够快(在一代人内),以至于在古环境记录中没有留下明显的痕迹。我们的研究结果说明了人类活动的空间复杂性,这种复杂性可以使社区在面临大规模灾害时能够承受或迅速恢复。在忽略考虑社会和经济组织的这种局部尺度变异性的情况下,关于社会崩溃风险的一般化模型夸大了人口对长期和短期生态胁迫因素的脆弱性,而不利于确定影响人口对变化的反应的社会约束因素。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/bfc8/9045639/1ac04de05000/pone.0266680.g001.jpg

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