水边高地:基斯基亚克景观的海岸脆弱性评估

E. Smith
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摘要

沿海考古遗址受到一系列环境变化过程的威胁,包括海平面上升、地面沉降和海岸线侵蚀。由于气候变化的影响,这些过程的发生速度正在加快,预计未来还会更快。这将导致考古遗址的进一步损失,同时,我们对沿海居民如何生活以及如何与他们的景观互动的认识也将丧失。我的研究评估了史前和接触时期位于弗吉尼亚州印第安菲尔德溪附近的美洲原住民遗址的脆弱性。这个地区经历了多次史前占领,在Kiskiak的原始历史村庄达到顶峰,在与欧洲人接触时,它是波瓦坦酋长的一部分。最近的考古发掘和对该地区发现的贝壳丘的仔细研究,增加了我们对基斯基亚克人如何在这一景观中居住以及与环境相互作用的了解。然而,实地观察显示,这些中部沉积物正在被积极侵蚀。我的研究考虑了各种环境和文化变量,以确定该地区哪些遗址最容易受到自然环境的影响,如果它们从考古记录中被冲走,哪些遗址将是我们对过去理解的最大损失。这里提出的研究结果为环境和文化管理者提供了指导,以最好地保护考古记录和我们对该地区土著人民的了解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
High Place at The Water’S Edge: A Coastal Vulnerability Assessment of the Kiskiak Landscape
Coastal archaeological sites are threatened by a host of environmental change processes, including sea level rise, land subsidence, and shoreline erosion. The rates at which these processes have been occurring are increasing, exacerbated by climate change, and are expected to increase even more rapidly in the future. This will cause further loss of archaeological sites and with them, the loss of our knowledge of how coastal inhabitants lived and interacted with their landscape. My research assesses the vulnerability of prehistoric and Contact period Native American sites situated around Indian Field Creek in Virginia. This area saw multiple prehistoric occupations, culminating in the protohistoric village of Kiskiak, which was part of the Powhatan chiefdom at the time of European contact. Recent archaeological excavations and the careful study of shell middens found in this area have added to our knowledge of how the Kiskiak people dwelled within this landscape and interacted with their environment. However, field observations have revealed that these midden deposits are actively being eroded. My research takes into consideration a variety of environmental and cultural variables to determine which sites in this area are most at risk from the natural environment and which would be the greatest loss to our understanding of the past if they were washed away from the archaeological record. The results of this research presented here provide guidance for environmental and cultural managers to best preserve the archaeological record and our knowledge of the native people of this region.
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