6 The Ecological Life of Industrial Waste

Haeden Stewart
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The post-depositional afterlife of an archaeological site is often viewed as the least important aspect of its history and outside of traditional archaeological interest. In the case of industrial sites, this elision ignores one of the most important aspects of industrial history, namely the long-term effects of toxic waste. In an era where industrial pollution and anthropogenic climate change are rapidly changing the future of life on this planet, the stakes of understanding the effects of industrial waste are vital. This article outlines a reflexive, ecologically focused archaeology that interrogates the afterlives of industrial waste, not as a method to get back to the history of production, but as a means for taking seriously these afterlives as a defining characteristic of life in the Anthropocene.  Using the concept of the ecological lives of industrial waste to explore the (post)industrial history of Mill Creek Ravine—a historically important industrial area in Edmonton, Alberta— this article argues that the decomposition of industrial waste serves as both a medium for long-term harms, as well as the locus for emergent relations and critical investigation.

工业废弃物的生态生命
考古遗址沉积后的来世通常被视为其历史中最不重要的方面,也不受传统考古兴趣的影响。在工业场地的情况下,这种省略忽略了工业历史上最重要的一个方面,即有毒废物的长期影响。在一个工业污染和人为气候变化正在迅速改变这个星球上生命未来的时代,了解工业废物的影响至关重要。本文概述了一种反思性的、以生态学为重点的考古学,它对工业废料的来世进行了探究,不是作为一种回到生产历史的方法,而是作为一种认真对待这些来世的手段,将其作为人类世生命的一个决定性特征。本文利用工业废物生态生命的概念来探索阿尔伯塔省埃德蒙顿历史上重要的工业区米尔克里克峡谷的(后)工业历史,认为工业废物的分解既是长期危害的媒介,也是紧急关系和关键调查的场所。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
3.80
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