Resilience Theory in Archaeology

The past can be characterized by periods of changing and stable relationships between human groups and their environment. In this article, I argue that use of “resilience theory” as a conceptual framework will assist archaeologists in interpreting the past in ways that are interesting and potentially relevant to contemporary issues. Many of the authors in this “In Focus” section primarily concentrate on the relationships associated with patterns of human extraction of resources and the impacts of those human activities on the continuing condition of the ecosystem. These processes are, of course, embedded in a complex web of relationships that are based on multiple interactions of underlying patterns and processes of both the ecological and social domains. In this article, I introduce a resilience theory perspective to argue that these transformations were characterized by very different reorganizations of the socioecological landscape and were the product of a variety of factors that operated at different scales of geography, time, and social organization.

[1]  D. Tilman,et al.  The Importance of Land-Use Legacies to Ecology and Conservation , 2003 .

[2]  C. S. Holling,et al.  Panarchy Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems , 2002 .

[3]  C. Fausto,et al.  Amazonia 1492: Pristine Forest or Cultural Parkland? , 2003, Science.

[4]  C. S. Holling Understanding the Complexity of Economic, Ecological, and Social Systems , 2001, Ecosystems.

[5]  P. Kirch,et al.  Soils, Agriculture, and Society in Precontact Hawai`i , 2004, Science.

[6]  Rebecca S. Toupal,et al.  Cultural Landscapes as a Methodology for Understanding Natural Resource Management Impacts in the Western United States , 2003 .

[7]  A. Kinzig,et al.  Resilience of past landscapes: Resilience theory, society, and the Longue Durée , 2003 .

[8]  J. Diamond Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed , 2005 .

[9]  Norwood Russell Hanson,et al.  Patterns of discovery : an inquiry into the conceptual foundations of science , 1958 .

[10]  K. Butzer Ecology in the Long View: Settlement Histories, Agrosystemic Strategies, and Ecological Performance , 1996 .

[11]  C. Redman,et al.  Placing Archaeology at the Center of Socio-Natural Studies , 2002, American Antiquity.

[12]  C. Mann The Real Dirt on Rainforest Fertility , 2002, Science.

[13]  C. Folke,et al.  Toward a “Science of the Long View” , 2003 .

[14]  Eberhard Zangger,et al.  Land Use and Soil Erosion in Prehistoric and Historical Greece , 1990 .

[15]  S. Krech The Ecological Indian: Myth and History , 1999 .

[16]  W. Denevan The Pristine Myth: The Landscape of the Americas in 1492 , 1992 .

[17]  Thomas Abel,et al.  A New Ecosystems Ecology for Anthropology , 2003 .

[18]  S. O'Hara,et al.  Accelerated soil erosion around a Mexican highland lake caused by prehispanic agriculture , 1993, Nature.

[19]  B. J. Price,et al.  Mesoamerica: The Evolution of a Civilization , 1968 .

[20]  K. Butzer No Eden in the New World , 1993, Nature.

[21]  C. Redman The archaeology of global change : the impact of humans on their environment , 2004 .

[22]  J. Steward,et al.  Theory of Culture Change: The Methodology of Multilinear Evolution , 1990 .

[23]  K. Walsh,et al.  Environmental Reconstruction in Mediterranean Landscape Archaeology , 2000 .

[24]  S. Carpenter,et al.  Catastrophic shifts in ecosystems , 2001, Nature.

[25]  Charles L. Redman,et al.  Human Impact on Ancient Environments , 1999 .

[26]  C. Fisher,et al.  A reexamination of human-induced environmental change within the Lake Pátzcuaro Basin, Michoacán, Mexico , 2003, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[27]  C. S. Holling,et al.  Resilience and Sustainable Development: Building Adaptive Capacity in a World of Transformations , 2002, Ambio.

[28]  J. McGlade Archaeology and the evolution of cultural landscapes: towards an interdisciplinary research agenda , 1999 .

[29]  C. S. Holling Resilience and Stability of Ecological Systems , 1973 .

[30]  Stephen R. Carpenter,et al.  Ecological and Social Dynamics in Simple Models of Ecosystem Management , 1999 .

[31]  S. Brand The Clock Of The Long Now: Time And Responsibility , 1999 .

[32]  Gary O. Rollefson,et al.  Early neolithic exploitation patterns in the Levant: Cultural impact on the environment , 1992 .

[33]  Brian M. Fagan,et al.  The Long Summer: How Climate Changed Civilization , 2003 .

[34]  Karl W. Butzer,et al.  Archaeology as human ecology : method and theory for a contextual approach , 1982 .

[35]  James M. Bayman The Hohokam of Southwest North America , 2001 .

[36]  J. P. Collins,et al.  A New Urban Ecology , 2000, American Scientist.

[37]  T. Mcgovern,et al.  Northern Islands, human error, and environmental degradation: A view of social and ecological change in the Medieval North Atlantic , 1988 .

[38]  Timothy A. Kohler Prehistoric human impact on the environment in the upland North American Southwest , 1992 .