Introduction
The assumption that "culture has triumphed over nature," is mistaken, and characterizes an outdated nature-culture dualism. While in Anthropological human evolution textbooks the first part of the story is couched in evolutionary and environmental terms, the second part denies the environment a meaningful role in human history. Instead values, beliefs and issues, history, and culture constitute the key elements of the explanatory framework. This also reflected in the disciplinary separation of Archeologist/physical anthropologists versus Sociocultural anthropologists: neither acknowledges their mutual reliance.
Few efforts have been made that incorporate information about how humans
have altered the environment or about how environmental change revised
human activity. Examples of such are change in subsistence strategies,
demography, perception.
There exists a need to develop a multidisicplinary framework. Multidisciplinarity
in science is, and has been (C.P. Snow), difficult to establish. In the
development of this much needed perspective, Anthropology plays an important
role. Its current perspective is integrative and comparative; inclusive
of temporal, spatial and cultural dimensions; and dynamic. It motivates
an historical focus on the dynamics of change.
Ecology
Ecology is the study of the "relationships among living organisms or between them and the physical environment." Macro-scale ecologists (global-scale ecology, '60's) have lost political ground to micro-scale ecologists.
Most ecologists study nonhuman relationships:
Landscape Ecology recognizes human influence on non human species, yet persist in distinguishing human from natural landscapes.
Human Ecology concentrates on systematic and evolutionary aspects, while
Social Ecology emphasizes behavior.
Both study human-environmenal relationships in distant past or present.
Sociobiology is a paradigm within human social ecology
Cultural Ecology and Cultural Geography examine adaptive strategies.
Both are cognizant of the role of culture in human adaptation, but
not interested in long term change. All lack explicit historical
component.
Environmental History is the intellectual history of the environmental movement, including the political and economical implications of environmental interaction.
Environmental Ethics explores value systems as they relate to human conduct.
None of these fields has truly integrative approach.What is neededis
a multiscalar temporal and spatial frame with an explicit focus on the
role of human cognition in the human-environmental dialectic.
Historical Analogs
Global climate change is one of the most pressing event of current times.
However, according to physical scientists "novel circumstances" render
any historical analogy irrelevant. This attitude is due to:
1) lack of "high quality long term (>100 yr.) instrumentally obtained
data"
2) local proxy data (such as tree ring) are only valid at the broadest
temporal scales.
3) dismay of the comparative messiness of soft social science data
4) vested interest in favor of novel technologies and undervalue of
traditional solutions
Global Climate Change Models do not discriminate among biotic zones or anywhere near a human scale. A regional approach overcomes this. A region's air mass data, hydrology, soil, topography and species distribution can be used in models. Regionally documented ethnography, archeology, and documentary evidence evidences results of human activities and past choices which encompass the entire system. The more varied the data, the more cross-check on validity!
Multiple regional environmental changes can identify sensitive geographical
locations. Interregional relationships may then be established and integrated
with global data. This approach fosters creativity and the development
of local and regional answers to global situations in which sensitive cultural
issues play an important part.
Historical Analogs and Landscapes
Two types of analogs can be made:
1) purely environmental: the global effects of El Chichon, 1982, was
like Krakatoa, 1883
2) dialectical environmental/cultural (mutual causation) ==> Proposed
in this book.
Interactive long term sequences may be traced through the study of
changing landscapes. Landscape Ecology is the study of structure, function,
and change of a heterogeneous land area composed of interacting ecosystems.
Historical Ecology or Landscape History is study of past ecosystems by
charting the change in landscapes over time
Evidence for the historical interrelatedness of human and environment. may be read in the landscape. By interference, changing human attitudes may also be identified and their effects studied. Existence of a forest is the result of both location, which determines temperature and rainfall patterns, and previous and current human management practices.
The introuction of historically informed environmental analyses into regional studies offers an important opportunity for anthropologists, archeologists, historians, and geographers. Archeology is multidisciplinary in nature (natural/physical sciences + humanities) and temporal and spatial breath required for long term analyses. Regional archeology has gone beyond the individual site, seeking to understand distribution, population and economies. Ethnohistorians are Anthropologists who critically examine documents for evidence of human actions, relations and attitudes. This includes written (diaries, government documents), oral (stories about storms or pest invasions), and visual (dated drawings) documents. Enthographers study customs based on observations and understandings that guide indigenous peoples' adaptive strategies. This cultural information is transferred in complex ritual behavior or casual conversation.
Historical Ecology is the practice of a globally relevant archeology,
ethnohistory, ethnography and related disciplines. While Geographic Information
Systems can give practical integration of spatial structures (habitations,
soils, river drainage), practical understanding of past and current relationships
among these environmental and human systems require a culturally specific
temporal and spatial perspective applied at a regional scale.
An Historical Ecological approach to Global Climate Change expects to identify:
1) Duration and frequency of air mass patterns that characterizes earlier
warm episodes (bv. middle Holocene, Roman Climatic Optimum, Medieval Climatic
Optimum), what regions where affected, how did biotic and human communities
respond to these conditions?
2) what spatial patterns are characteristic of biotic communities (species
diversity and distribution) and human communities (settlement and land-use,
population and agglomeration) in the earlier warm episodes?
3) How might patterns be mapped in advance of contemporary global warming?
4) What measures could contemporary societies employ to cope with supra-annual
cycles?
5) What human behaviors, attitudes, beliefs, economic strategies, and
forms of governance are associated with periods of stable or unstable climate?
6) What measures could contemporary societies employ to cope with a
marked increase in climatic instability?
7) What values ensure the greatest flexibility in adapting to changed
or unstable environment. ?
8) Can environmental flexibility be taught?
9) How can a global environmental ethic also be culturally sensitive?
10) Are some governmental structures better able than others to employ
the necessary strategies of adaptation?
Integrative themes and considerations
Practices are maintained or modified, decisions are made, and ideas
are given shape; a landscape retains the physical evidence of these mental
activities.
Summary by Danny de Vries, December 1998