Peopled landscapes : archaeological and biogeographic approaches to landscapes /

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:Acton, A.C.T. : ANU E Press, [2012]
©2012
Description:1 online resource (472 pages) : illustrations (some color), color map
Language:English
Series:Terra Australis ; 34
Terra Australis ; 34.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11396849
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Haberle, Simon, editor.
David, Bruno, 1962- editor.
ISBN:9781921862724
1921862726
9781921862717
1921862718
Digital file characteristics:data file
Notes:Includes bibliographical references.
English.
Summary:"This volume brings together a collection of papers from a diverse field of international scholars exploring the multiple ways that East Timorese communities are making and remaking their connections to land and places of ancestral significance. The work is explicitly comparative and highlights the different ways Timorese language communities negotiate access and transactions in land, disputes and inheritance especially in areas subject to historical displacement and resettlement. Consideration is extended to the role of ritual performance and social alliance for inscribing connection and entitlement. Emerging through analysis is an appreciation of how relations to land, articulated in origin discourses, are implicated in the construction of national culture and differential contributions to the struggle for independence."--Publisher's description
Other form:Print version: Peopled landscapes : archaeological and biogeographic approaches to landscapes. Canberra, Australia : ANU E Press, ©2012 472 pages Terra Australis ; Volume 34 9781921862717
Standard no.:10.26530/OAPEN_459438
Description
Summary:

This impressive collection celebrates the work of Peter Kershaw, a key figure in the field of Australian palaeoenvironmental reconstruction. Over almost half a century his research helped reconceptualize ecology in Australia, creating a detailed understanding of environmental change in the Late Pleistocene and Holocene. Within a biogeographic framework one of his exceptional contributions was to explore the ways that Aboriginal people may have modified the landscape through the effects of anthropogenic burning. These ideas have had significant impacts on thinking within the fields of geomorphology, biogeography, archaeology, anthropology and history. Papers presented here continue to explore the dynamism of landscape change in Australia and the contribution of humans to those transformations. The volume is structured in two sections. The first examines evidence for human engagement with landscape, focusing on Australia and Papua New Guinea but also dealing with the human/environmental histories of Europe and Asia. The second section contains papers that examine palaeoecology and present some of the latest research into environmental change in Australia and New Zealand. Individually these papers, written by many of Australia's prominent researchers in these fields, are significant contributions to our knowledge of Quaternary landscapes and human land use. But Peopled Landscapes also signifies the disciplinary entanglement that is archaeological and biogeographic research in this region, with archaeologists and environmental scientists contributing to both studies of human land use and palaeoecology. Peopled Landscapes reveals the interdisciplinary richness of Quaternary research in the Australasian region as well as the complexity and richness of the entangled environmental and human pasts of these lands.

Physical Description:1 online resource (472 pages) : illustrations (some color), color map
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN:9781921862724
1921862726
9781921862717
1921862718