Archaeologists have long encountered evidence of natural disasters through excavation and stratigraphy. In Surviving Sudden Environmental Change, case studies examine how eight different past human communities—ranging from Arctic to equatorial regions, from tropical rainforests to desert interiors, and from deep prehistory to living memory—faced and coped with such dangers
While the speed of current climatic changes is unprecedented, their ramifications are not. Floods an...
Climate change is already having an impact on global public health, human security (including food a...
The twenty-first century is likely to be characterised by large changes in regional climatic and env...
Archaeologists have long encountered evidence of natural disasters through excavation and stratigrap...
Archaeologists have long encountered evidence of natural disasters through excavation and stratigrap...
Human communities around the world are increasingly worried about the dangers of sudden environmenta...
The topic of societal collapse was introduced to archaeological and anthropological sciences from di...
The number of environmental catastrophes is rising, mostly owing to an increase in hydrometeorologic...
Climatic changes have occurred throughout human history, but instrumental measurements do not provid...
History and archaeology have a well-established engagement with issues of premodern societal develop...
Since publication of the Brundtland report (WCED 1987), much of the academic and political discussio...
Climate change is a significant threat to human health, especially for societies already confronted ...
Natural disasters may challenge the sustainability of societies. This Third Semester essay in Archae...
Understanding the resilience of early societies to climate change is an essential part of exploring ...
The archeological and historical record is replete with evidence for prehistoric, ancient and pre-mo...
While the speed of current climatic changes is unprecedented, their ramifications are not. Floods an...
Climate change is already having an impact on global public health, human security (including food a...
The twenty-first century is likely to be characterised by large changes in regional climatic and env...
Archaeologists have long encountered evidence of natural disasters through excavation and stratigrap...
Archaeologists have long encountered evidence of natural disasters through excavation and stratigrap...
Human communities around the world are increasingly worried about the dangers of sudden environmenta...
The topic of societal collapse was introduced to archaeological and anthropological sciences from di...
The number of environmental catastrophes is rising, mostly owing to an increase in hydrometeorologic...
Climatic changes have occurred throughout human history, but instrumental measurements do not provid...
History and archaeology have a well-established engagement with issues of premodern societal develop...
Since publication of the Brundtland report (WCED 1987), much of the academic and political discussio...
Climate change is a significant threat to human health, especially for societies already confronted ...
Natural disasters may challenge the sustainability of societies. This Third Semester essay in Archae...
Understanding the resilience of early societies to climate change is an essential part of exploring ...
The archeological and historical record is replete with evidence for prehistoric, ancient and pre-mo...
While the speed of current climatic changes is unprecedented, their ramifications are not. Floods an...
Climate change is already having an impact on global public health, human security (including food a...
The twenty-first century is likely to be characterised by large changes in regional climatic and env...