Exploring Ancient Solutions for Modern Challenges: Archaeological Insights into Food Systems and Adaptations to Changing Environments (original) (raw)

2024, Call For Papers EAA Rome 2024

The world is facing intensified rates of adverse climate and environmental change, population growth, and food insecurity. However, challenges that face us today are not totally new and many past societies have struggled with similar issues. But perspectives from the past remain underutilized. In this context, studying human-environment interactions, subsistence strategies, and human and plant response to changing environmental conditions is the most obvious way for archaeology to contribute to the global quest for sustainable solutions to cope with current challenges. In this session, we are seeking to put together interdisciplinary studies that investigate past food systems in the light of deteriorating paleoclimatic and paleoenvironmental conditions. We focus on two major directions: 1- Which methods, models, and datasets are actually suitable to investigate system changes (i.e., the introduction or abandonment of crops, a shift to new agricultural strategies)? 2- What are examples of past system changes and how can these contribute to current debate on food security and adaptation to changing environmental conditions? Building on these two pillars, we would like to discuss perspectives in interdisciplinary palaeoenvironmental archaeology and archaeobotany. We appreciate a balance between local, regional, and supraregional studies to integrate various spatial scales into the discussion. Diachronic studies are particularly welcome to investigate transformation processes over time.

Food, economy and society: Multi-faceted lessons to learn from ancient plant remains

Plant remains and animal bones from archaeological excavations form the basis for interpretation in ancient food studies. This paper presents the methods and theory of archaeobotany, followed by a discussion of the Danish archaeobotanical record. The often very well-preserved archaeobotanical assemblages, of which some examples are presented below, hold great potential for providing new insights on ancient agriculture and food practices.

Archaeological Studies of the Long-Term Resilience of Food Supplies to Climatic Shocks in Arid North America and the North Atlantic

One of the only long-term records of societies' capacities to change (i.e., maintain a resilient social-ecological system) is the archaeological record. Our papers contribute to understanding how the resilience of a food supply in small-scale societies affects the persistence of social-ecological systems over the long-term. According to the Aims and Vision statement of the Resilience 2014 conference, transformability is “the capacity of a society to change the system's state variables when current trajectories become untenable.” This vision presupposes that members of a society 1) can recognize that a trajectory is untenable, and 2) have the capacity to cooperate and change the necessary state variables that limit a society's capacity to change. Our papers investigate these two critical processes over the long-term: The ability to recognize that a trajectory of food production is untenable and constraints on the capacity of societies to change the relevant state variables when a system of food production looses resilience. Our papers emphasize the work of young scholars leading papers on transdisciplinary projects. We draw on the long-term nature of the archaeological record to identify trade-offs and synergies between strategies for producing food and the persistence of social-ecological systems in arid North America and the offshore islands of the North Atlantic. Both of these regions presented common challenges for food producers: The productivity of terrestrial ecosystems is highly constrained, either by aridity or cold, and terrestrial productivity is also highly uncertain from year-to-year. In arid North America and the North Atlantic, prehistoric peoples developed various systems of food production to cope with the potentially negative consequences of low and unpredictable terrestrial productivity. For example, in the Zuni area of modern day New Mexico, farmers invested in intricate physical infrastructure to subsidize the flow of water into their gardens to produce more reliable yields from domesticated plants, such as maize, beans and squash. In the North Atlantic, populations attempted to maintain diverse production systems that included pastoralism, the harvest of marine resources, trade and minor crop production. Our research explores the intersection of particular configurations of food production strategies and social networks on the long-term resilience of food supplies to droughts (in arid North America) and extreme cold (in the North Atlantic). Each system of food production considered was embedded in social networks that partly determined how and where people could move and who people could count on during times of food stress. In general, we illustrate the long-term effects of different social structures on the resilience of food supplies to drought and extreme cold. We also illustrate trade-offs between what is the most resilient strategy of securing a food supply for individuals vs. the best strategy at the level of a social-ecological system. Such trade-offs constrain the capacity of groups to cooperate and transform a system. We seek to create private-public, academic-policy conversations to 1) inform on the variables that effect long-term outcomes in social-ecological systems, and 2) obtain feedback on the relevance and shortcomings of knowledge generated from studies of systems over the long-term.

From ecological opportunism to multi-cropping: Mapping food globalisation in prehistory

2019

Many of today's major food crops are distributed worldwide. While much of this ‘food globalisation’ has resulted from modern trade networks, it has its roots in prehistory. In this paper, we examine cereal crops that moved long distances across the Old World between 5000 and 1500 BC. Drawing together recent archaeological evidence, we are now able to construct a new chronology and biogeography of prehistoric food globalisation. Here we rationalize the evidence for this process within three successive episodes: pre-5000 BC, between 5000 and 2500 BC, and between 2500 and 1500 BC. Each episode can be characterized by distinct biogeographical patterns, social drivers of the crop movements, and ecological constraints upon the crop plants. By 1500 BC, this process of food globalisation had brought together previously isolated agricultural systems, to constitute a new kind of agriculture in which the bringing together of local and exotic crops enables a new form of intensification.

Archaeobotany and the social context of food

Acta Palaeobotanica, 2002

Acta Palaeobot. 42(2): 196-202, 2002 Archaeobotany and the social context of food CAROL PALMER1 and MARIJKE VAN DER VEEN2 School of Archaeology and Ancient History, University of Leicester, Leicester, LEI 7RH, UK; e-mail: 1 cp24@ie.ac.uk , 2 mvdl@leicester.ac.uk ...

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