Historical Ecology: Time, Place, People, Change - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 28
About This Presentation
Title:

Historical Ecology: Time, Place, People, Change

Description:

Historical Ecology: Time, Place, People, Change – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:65
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 29
Provided by: thomashm
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Historical Ecology: Time, Place, People, Change


1
(No Transcript)
2
Tipping Points in History
  • Well Adapted But Still ExtinctNorse Greenland
    in New Perspective
  • Tom McGovern, Andy Dugmore, Christian Keller,
    Astrid Ogilvie, Konrad Smiarowski, Jette
    Arneborg, Andy Casely
  • the rest of the NABO gang

3
Historical Thresholds
  • 18th century ends 1789
  • 19th century ends 1914
  • 20th century ends 1989

4
Thresholds and Conjunctures
  • Things Fall Apart and Come Together- Suddenly.
  • Coupled Human and Natural Systems are affected by
    processes operating over different time scales
    which can combine in unexpected ways
    (Conjunctures).
  • Rates of Change Vary Widely, but sudden social/
    environmental threshold crossings are at least as
    common as gradual shifts.
  • Triggers for threshold crossings are sometimes
    natural, sometimes social, often both.

5
Norse Greenland c. AD 985-1450
  • Classic Northern Mystery Blondes Lost in the
    Mist.
  • Speculation since 1725.
  • Archaeology since 1927.
  • Multiple theories.
  • Inuit invasion, Basque pirates, killer
    caterpillars.
  • Diamond Collapse
  • Human Impact (Erosion)
  • Maladaptation (no fish on Friday)
  • Climate Change (it got cold.)
  • Oppressive elites (and foreign too).

6
Norse Settlements
  • Two areas of permanent farms in the SW.
  • Eastern Settlement has ca. 400 ruins.
  • Western Settlement has ca. 80 ruins.
  • The Norðursetur (Northern Hunting Grounds) were
    in the Disko Bay area, 800 km N of the
    settlements.

Norðursetur
Western Settlement
Eastern Settlement
7
Walrus in Greenland
Norse Hunters transported the dense maxilla and
tusk ivory home for final tusk extraction. Most
farms in both settlements have produced some
fragments of walrus maxilla and a few chips of
ivory. Finished ivory is very rare in Greenland.
Walrus are found throughout Greenland, but
concentrate in the central W coast (Disko Bay).
The Norse traveled for weeks from the two
settlement areas to reach this Northern Hunting
Ground
8
Inner Fjord Pastures
  • Warmer summers of the continental inner fjords
    produce more degree days- and richer vegetation.
  • In the two large environmental pockets of the
    Eastern and Western Settlement, Greenland is
    really green- comparable to good Icelandic
    pastures.

9
The Icelandic Erosion StoryMissing
Sustainability by a Week?
10
Relative stream bank stability
Limited fan development
Limited pond infilling
11
Caribou Hunting
  • Greenland Caribou
  • Prone to local extinction- esp. in the SW (range
    icing).
  • After introduction of guns ca 1800, caribou made
    extinct in the Eastern Settlement Area.
  • However, Norse archaeofauna have many caribou
    bones in all phases, in both Eastern Western
    Settlements.
  • Despite climate fluctuations, drive systems, big
    hunting dogs, competition w/sheep goatswhy
    didnt the Norse make the E Settlement Caribou
    extinct?
  • Sustainable Management?

12
Norse Sealing in Greenland Arctic species and
migratory riches
  • New Species Encountered Migratory Harp and
    Hooded seals, non-migratory Ringed and Bearded
    Seal.
  • Norse Greenlanders rapidly exploit seasonal Harp
    and Hooded seal migration (nets, clubs, boat
    drives coordinated labor).
  • No harpoons in Norse sites.
  • Non-migratory (breathing hole) seals are not much
    hunted.
  • Missing technology missed opportunity???

13
By the 14th c. small farms show the highest of
seal bones
14
(No Transcript)
15
Inland Icelandic Pagan Burials
16
The Price of a Polar Bear 1127
  • Einar Sokkasons Story reports that in 1127
    Greenlandic chieftains decided to acquire a
    bishop of their own.
  • The Greenlanders transport a live polar bear to
    the King of Norways court, and acquire Bishop
    Arnald in exchange.
  • He is not happy to come.but adjusts by taking
    over the manor at Gardar in the E Settlement.

17
(No Transcript)
18
Norse Greenland ca. 1300
  • Small but well established communities based on
    inner fjord farms.
  • Well integrated use of communal labor (seals,
    birds).
  • Apparently successful caribou conservation.
  • No significant soil erosion.
  • Continued importance of Norðursetur hunt Walrus
    ivory.
  • Substantial, well furnished stone churches
    (stained glass, church bells) built ca.
    1150-1300.
  • Westernmost outpost of medieval Christendom-
    Bishop, Law codes, monasteries.social
    stratification.

19
After 1300things fall apart?
  • No more churches constructed after 1300
  • Western Settlement abandoned ca. 1350.
  • Last recorded contact 1408.
  • Eastern Settlement probably extinct ca. 1450.

20
Declining demand for ivory?
The impact of cultural change
21
Fig. 1 Central Greenland derived
palaeotemperatures (GISP2 180 )
985 AD
12th Century AD
14th Century AD
F
E
E Departures from mean (right hand scale) F
Cumulative departures from mean (left hand scale)
22
Whale Hunters and Warriors ?
  • Warfare around the Pacific rim intensifies in the
    first millennium AD.
  • Archaeological finds of slat armor and barbed
    arrows in the Bering sea area.
  • Phases of intensive whaling correlate with
    intensified warfare social ranking.

23
Thule-Norse culture contact moves into the Norse
Settlement areas.
  • By 1300, Thule winter settlements appear in the
    outer fjord and fjord mouth zones of the Western
    Settlement.
  • Thule migrants discover Norse farms in the inner
    fjords.
  • If conflict occurs, the Thule are positioned to
    cut off Norse access to migratory seals.

24
Well adapted but still dead..
  • Norse resource use is sustainable (450 years!)
  • No erosion disaster
  • No caribou extinction
  • Communal labor coordination for
  • Sealing
  • Sea Bird hunting
  • Walrus hunt / Norðursetur
  • Written laws for communal resource use (no
    tragedy of these commons)
  • Both top down and bottom up regulation
    enforcement.
  • Old colonists vs. tramps?
  • K vs. r???

25
Smarter than Vikings??????
26
(No Transcript)
27
Resources
Enhanced by Fields Fertiliser Introductions Know
ledge Marine harvests
Resources
Population decline initially forces Contraction
of resource utilisation
Population
Subsequent resource shortage continues
population decline
I I I I I I I
Initial
Social collapse Failure of communal provisioning
I I I I I I I I
Time
Extinction
28
Viking Age Settlement Circumpolar Geography
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com