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Environmental archaeology is a sub-field of archaeology and is the science of reconstructing the relationship between ancient peoples and the environments they lived in.〔(Environmental Archaeology )〕 The field is an archaeological-palaeoecological approach to examining the paleoenvironment.〔Guido, M. , Menozzi, B. , Bellini, C. , Placereani, S. , & Montanari, C. (2013). A palynological contribution to the environmental archaeology of a mediterranean mountain wetland (north west apennines, italy). Holocene, 23(11), 1517-1527.〕 This field aims to understand whether the environment of ancient peoples was a driving force in cultural change or merely a factor in its development. Reconstructing past environments gives archaeologists insight as to what adaptations past peoples needed to undergo in order to survive, and what environmental changes may have played a role in their disappearance.〔Branch et al. 2005. Environmental Archaeology: Theoretical and Practical Approaches. Hodder Arnold education.〕 Environmental archaeology is commonly divided into three sub-fields: * archaeobotany (the study of plant remains) 〔(Archaeobotany )〕 * zooarchaeology (the study of faunal remains)〔(Zooarchaeology )〕 * geoarchaeology (the study of geological processes and their relationship to the archaeological record) Other related fields include: *landscape archaeology *bioarchaeology and human ecology *climatology Environmental archaeology often involves studying paleoenvironmental remains to see what species were present at the time, as well as how people interacted with and utilized them. It also may involve examining the physical environment and what resources would have been available to people and how they could be used. This field is also useful when human made artifacts may be absent from the site, or in cases of earth movement, such as erosion, which may have buried artifacts and features of sites.〔 While related subfields such as bioarchaeology and geomorphology are defined by the material that they study, 'environmental' is used to describe a theme that should be considered across archaeology as a whole.〔Butzer, K.W. (2012). Collapse, environment, and society. "PNAS, 109"(10), 3632-3639. doi:10.1073/pnas.1114845109.〕 Environmental archaeology has emerged as a named discipline only in the last 30 years. Environmental archaeology has seen a surge of interest in recent years, as it is one of the few disciplines that is able to provide empirical evidence to show how humans have responded to rapid climate change in the past. It has rapidly grown in significance and is now seen as a major component to most excavation projects. The field is often multidisciplinary, and environmental scientists have been recruited to work with archaeologists and anthropologists to better understand human-environment interactions.〔Zong, Y. , Chen, Z. , & Yu, Z. (2012). Multidisciplinary studies in environmental archaeology with particular reference to china: An introduction to the special issue. The Holocene, 22(6), 609-611.〕 A prominent figure in this field is Karl Butzer.〔UT Department of Geography and the Environment ()〕 Many universities teach the subject as a standard course component and also as a separate degree. One leading university in this field is Royal Holloway University of London, where the discipline is taught as part of an Environmental Archaeology degree. ==External links== * (Association for Environmental Archaeology ) * (Royal Holloway Geography Undergraduate Programme ) * http://archaeology.about.com/od/eterms/g/environmental.htm * http://www.greatarchaeology.com/environmental_archaeology.htm 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Environmental archaeology」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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