Sustainability across the Neotropics: an archaeological perspective from the pre-Columbian Maya lowlands to the Amazon basin
Van Dalen, B
Date: 28 October 2024
Thesis or dissertation
Publisher
University of Exeter
Degree Title
PhD in Archaeology
Abstract
Sustainability has become a critical issue in today's world. This enormous challenge is shared by the
scientific, political, and public worlds, influencing thought and action from the household to
international platforms such as the Paris Agreement. However, across the globe, current attempts to
achieve sustainability rarely lead ...
Sustainability has become a critical issue in today's world. This enormous challenge is shared by the
scientific, political, and public worlds, influencing thought and action from the household to
international platforms such as the Paris Agreement. However, across the globe, current attempts to
achieve sustainability rarely lead to desired results as organizations and governments experiment with
new strategies and policies yet lack deep-time data in the evaluation of their success.
The archaeological and paleoecological disciplines are ideally positioned to resolve this pressing issue
at the core of the pursuit of sustainability. Despite this potential, a method to systematically examine
deep-time sustainability and inform contemporary engagements is yet to be developed. Whereas
archaeological research on this topic is growing exponentially, the vast majority of studies remain
limited to incompatible fragmented, descriptive, and anecdotal observations while contemporary
engagements with sustainability require rigorous quantitative data. As a result, how sustainability
might be achieved, what factors play an important role, and what lessons we can learn from the past
all remain largely unanswered.
There is a need for a data-driven approach that can offer more concrete quantitative evidence and
that allows systematic examination of sustainability dynamics across time and space, irrespective of
geography or culture. To fill this gap, this thesis develops, explores, and demonstrates the potential
of a novel methodology for systematic deep-time sustainability assessment, with a focus on the pre-
Columbian Neotropics. Building on a multi-proxy approach and integrating archaeological and
paleoecological data with contemporary sustainability science, this study attempts to provide a steppingstone towards a more systematic engagement with deep-time sustainability which would ultimately foster the application of archaeological knowledge to address the global sustainability challenges of the 21st century.
Doctoral Theses
Doctoral College
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