European agricultural terraces and lynchets: from archaeological theory to heritage management
European agricultural terraces and lynchets: from archaeological theory to heritage management
Terraces are highly productive, culturally distinctive socioecological systems. Although they form part of time/place-specific debates, terraces per se have been neglected–fields on slopes or landscape elements. We argue that this is due to mapping and dating problems, and lack of artefacts/ecofacts. However, new techniques can overcome some of these constraints, allowing us to re-engage with theoretical debates around agricultural intensification. Starting from neo-Broserupian propositions, we can engage with the sociopolitical and environmental aspects of terrace emergence, maintenance and abandonment. Non-reductionist avenues include identifying and dating different phases of development within single terrace systems, identifying a full crop-range, and other activities not generally associated with terraces (e.g. metallurgy). The proposition here is that terraces are a multi-facetted investment that includes both intensification and diversification and can occur under a range of social conditions but which constitutes a response to demographic pressure in the face to fluctuating environmental conditions.
Agricultural intensification, agricultural sustainability, landscape change, population density, remote sensing, terrace classification
566-588
Brown, Antony
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Walsh, Kevin
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Fallu, Daniel
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Cucchiaro, Sara
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Tarolli, Paolo
2126b078-784e-4444-9bf1-2a2dffdb8e38
23 March 2021
Brown, Antony
c51f9d3e-02b0-47da-a483-41c354e78fab
Walsh, Kevin
31d5d7c1-bda6-4a40-941f-65ca1288a8f5
Fallu, Daniel
3f91622e-bf08-458c-beec-505bf161b20d
Cucchiaro, Sara
7d9876e2-f73c-411d-9966-980681b3f3cd
Tarolli, Paolo
2126b078-784e-4444-9bf1-2a2dffdb8e38
Brown, Antony, Walsh, Kevin, Fallu, Daniel, Cucchiaro, Sara and Tarolli, Paolo
(2021)
European agricultural terraces and lynchets: from archaeological theory to heritage management.
World Archaeology, 52 (4), .
(doi:10.1080/00438243.2021.1891963).
Abstract
Terraces are highly productive, culturally distinctive socioecological systems. Although they form part of time/place-specific debates, terraces per se have been neglected–fields on slopes or landscape elements. We argue that this is due to mapping and dating problems, and lack of artefacts/ecofacts. However, new techniques can overcome some of these constraints, allowing us to re-engage with theoretical debates around agricultural intensification. Starting from neo-Broserupian propositions, we can engage with the sociopolitical and environmental aspects of terrace emergence, maintenance and abandonment. Non-reductionist avenues include identifying and dating different phases of development within single terrace systems, identifying a full crop-range, and other activities not generally associated with terraces (e.g. metallurgy). The proposition here is that terraces are a multi-facetted investment that includes both intensification and diversification and can occur under a range of social conditions but which constitutes a response to demographic pressure in the face to fluctuating environmental conditions.
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European agricultural terraces and lynchets from archaeological theory to heritage management
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Published date: 23 March 2021
Keywords:
Agricultural intensification, agricultural sustainability, landscape change, population density, remote sensing, terrace classification
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Local EPrints ID: 448979
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/448979
ISSN: 0043-8243
PURE UUID: 4cc0f100-92a3-4dfa-8b3a-18cf0d9a80d5
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Date deposited: 12 May 2021 16:33
Last modified: 06 Jun 2024 01:44
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Author:
Kevin Walsh
Author:
Daniel Fallu
Author:
Sara Cucchiaro
Author:
Paolo Tarolli
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