Landscapes of Movement Along the (Pre)Historical Libyan Sea: Keys for a Socio-Ecological History

This study examines the influence of Human Ecodynamics and Historical Ecology to understand the complexities of historical mobility. Based on Landscape Archaeology, this study considers some of these theoretical principles for studying and reconstructing the movements of past human populations. This...

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Main Authors: Laguna-Palma David, Barruezo-Vaquero Pablo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2023-12-01
Series:Open Archaeology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2022-0346
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author Laguna-Palma David
Barruezo-Vaquero Pablo
author_facet Laguna-Palma David
Barruezo-Vaquero Pablo
author_sort Laguna-Palma David
collection DOAJ
description This study examines the influence of Human Ecodynamics and Historical Ecology to understand the complexities of historical mobility. Based on Landscape Archaeology, this study considers some of these theoretical principles for studying and reconstructing the movements of past human populations. This discussion is grounded on the example of a research project focused on modelling movement and interaction patterns between the Aegean area (Crete) and northeastern African region (Marmarica) from the Late Bronze to Roman times. The project works with multivariate data representative of the routes and non-human factors that may interplay in biocultural processes. Three key aspects structure this article: (1) the emergence of Human Ecodynamics and Historical Ecology in archaeology, (2) their impact on the theoretical evolution of Landscape Archaeology, and (3) the methodological implementation of these principles through a case study. We specifically discuss the strengths of Human Ecodynamics and Historical Ecology to enhance the conceptualisation of mobility by considering the heterarchical interrelationships between human and non-human agents. Our methodological implementations showcase this by using computational approaches to model human pathways influenced by and in constant relationship with their environment. This research thus highlights the importance of transdisciplinary approaches to studying historical mobility from an archaeological and complex systems perspective.
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spelling doaj.art-5f388d3a7d58480381654b2431a3416f2024-01-22T07:05:05ZengDe GruyterOpen Archaeology2300-65602023-12-019117519210.1515/opar-2022-0346Landscapes of Movement Along the (Pre)Historical Libyan Sea: Keys for a Socio-Ecological HistoryLaguna-Palma David0Barruezo-Vaquero Pablo1Department of Prehistory and Archaeology, Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, Campus Universitario de Cartuja s/n, University of Granada, Granada, 18071, SpainBiocultural Archaeology Laboratory (MEMOLab), Department of Medieval History and Historiographic Sciences, University of Granada, Granada, SpainThis study examines the influence of Human Ecodynamics and Historical Ecology to understand the complexities of historical mobility. Based on Landscape Archaeology, this study considers some of these theoretical principles for studying and reconstructing the movements of past human populations. This discussion is grounded on the example of a research project focused on modelling movement and interaction patterns between the Aegean area (Crete) and northeastern African region (Marmarica) from the Late Bronze to Roman times. The project works with multivariate data representative of the routes and non-human factors that may interplay in biocultural processes. Three key aspects structure this article: (1) the emergence of Human Ecodynamics and Historical Ecology in archaeology, (2) their impact on the theoretical evolution of Landscape Archaeology, and (3) the methodological implementation of these principles through a case study. We specifically discuss the strengths of Human Ecodynamics and Historical Ecology to enhance the conceptualisation of mobility by considering the heterarchical interrelationships between human and non-human agents. Our methodological implementations showcase this by using computational approaches to model human pathways influenced by and in constant relationship with their environment. This research thus highlights the importance of transdisciplinary approaches to studying historical mobility from an archaeological and complex systems perspective.https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2022-0346human ecodynamicshistorical ecologylandscape archaeologypast movementscomplex systems theoryeastern mediterranean
spellingShingle Laguna-Palma David
Barruezo-Vaquero Pablo
Landscapes of Movement Along the (Pre)Historical Libyan Sea: Keys for a Socio-Ecological History
Open Archaeology
human ecodynamics
historical ecology
landscape archaeology
past movements
complex systems theory
eastern mediterranean
title Landscapes of Movement Along the (Pre)Historical Libyan Sea: Keys for a Socio-Ecological History
title_full Landscapes of Movement Along the (Pre)Historical Libyan Sea: Keys for a Socio-Ecological History
title_fullStr Landscapes of Movement Along the (Pre)Historical Libyan Sea: Keys for a Socio-Ecological History
title_full_unstemmed Landscapes of Movement Along the (Pre)Historical Libyan Sea: Keys for a Socio-Ecological History
title_short Landscapes of Movement Along the (Pre)Historical Libyan Sea: Keys for a Socio-Ecological History
title_sort landscapes of movement along the pre historical libyan sea keys for a socio ecological history
topic human ecodynamics
historical ecology
landscape archaeology
past movements
complex systems theory
eastern mediterranean
url https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2022-0346
work_keys_str_mv AT lagunapalmadavid landscapesofmovementalongtheprehistoricallibyanseakeysforasocioecologicalhistory
AT barruezovaqueropablo landscapesofmovementalongtheprehistoricallibyanseakeysforasocioecologicalhistory