非洲最早时期的山地历史

Christopher A. Conte
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摘要

在漫长的地质年代中,非洲山脉的自然历史就是一部岩石圈兴衰的故事。几亿年来,地壳构造的力量掀起了一层又一层的变质岩和火成岩,而风、水、冰和重力共同作用,打开了盆地,冲刷了山谷,抹去了岩石。非洲最近的造山活动始于中新世(2300万年前),一直持续到今天。有些山,比如乞力马扎罗山和喀麦隆火山,只有几百万年的历史。其他高地,如坦桑尼亚的东弧山脉,则是由3000多万年前形成的结晶岩石形成的。正如它们在今天的景观中所呈现的那样,非洲的山脉呈现出新旧地貌的混合,被一个由居住的动植物组成的生物圈所覆盖,这些动植物在海拔、坡度、温度、降雨量和地形所提供的无数生态位中进化。人类在山地历史上相对较晚出现,却极大地改变了高地。在非洲,山脉吸引着人们。非洲的山脉并不构成环境史学科中一个独立的研究课题,尽管对个别山区的重要研究确实存在。历史学术也不局限于人文学科。在历史研究中,自然科学利用经验证据重建人类活动下的山地景观变化。接下来要做的是将一个杂乱的、多学科的学术文献连贯地编织在一起。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mountain History in Africa from the Earliest Times
Over the long haul of geological time, the natural history of Africa’s mountains is a story of the lithosphere’s rise and fall. For hundreds of millions of years, tectonic forces have heaved up layers of metamorphic and igneous material while wind, water, ice, and gravity combined to open basins, scour valleys, and obliterate rock. The most recent phase in mountain building in Africa began in the Miocene (twenty-three million years ago) and continues today. Some mountains, like the volcanic mountains Kilimanjaro and Cameroon, are only a few million years old. Other highlands, like Tanzania’s Eastern Arc Mountains, derive from crystalline rock formed more than thirty million years ago. As they appear on the landscape today, Africa’s mountains present a mix of old and new landforms covered by a biosphere of resident plants and animals that evolved in the countless niches provided by elevation, slope, temperature, rainfall, and aspect. Human beings, relative latecomers to mountain history, have altered the highlands dramatically. In Africa, mountains attract people. Africa’s mountains do not constitute a discrete subject of study in the discipline of environmental history, though important studies of individual mountain zones do exist. Nor is the historical scholarship limited to the humanities. In studies that are essentially historical in approach, the natural sciences use empirical evidence to reconstruct mountain landscape change under human use. What follows is an attempt to knit together coherently a messy, multi-disciplinary scholarly literature.
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