Public Archaeology and Climate Change 2017
DOI: 10.2307/j.ctvh1dp4n.5
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Public archaeology and climate change:

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Cited by 5 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…This is a significant investment for a community with a population of only about 800 people, with these infrastructure improvement/re‐location needs only likely to increase throughout the Arctic in the context of rapidly changing coastal conditions. In contrast to existing plans for airport realignment, culturally significant locations, such as the Old Tikiġaq site and the Ipiutak archeological site, which is a U.S. National Historic Landmark located northeast of the airport, will require alternative means of protection if they are to not be lost to the ocean (Dawson et al., 2017). Beyond Point Hope, many coastal communities across Alaska experiencing the impacts of erosion face relocation or the staggering costs of engineered solutions to adapt (Mason et al., 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is a significant investment for a community with a population of only about 800 people, with these infrastructure improvement/re‐location needs only likely to increase throughout the Arctic in the context of rapidly changing coastal conditions. In contrast to existing plans for airport realignment, culturally significant locations, such as the Old Tikiġaq site and the Ipiutak archeological site, which is a U.S. National Historic Landmark located northeast of the airport, will require alternative means of protection if they are to not be lost to the ocean (Dawson et al., 2017). Beyond Point Hope, many coastal communities across Alaska experiencing the impacts of erosion face relocation or the staggering costs of engineered solutions to adapt (Mason et al., 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Britton and Hillerdal's capstone paper in the special issue returns focus to the project as a whole, but also its place in the broader context of climate change archaeology-a growing field in the discipline Nimura et al 2017; Sandweiss and Kelley 2012; Van de Noort 2011). The paper presented here emphasizes the pluralities of climate change archaeology, within the field of archaeology and in the context of Arctic and subarctic community archaeology.…”
Section: Kate Britton I Charlotta Hillerdal Ii and Rick Knecht Iiimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…L'impact du changement climatique sur la subsistance, tel que reflété dans les paroles des membres de la communauté, et la valeur de l'archéologie pour relier les communautés à un passé plus profond concordent avec le dernier article de la série. L'article de Britton et Hillerdal constitue la pierre angulaire de ce numéro thématique et remet l'accent sur le projet dans son ensemble, mais aussi sur sa place dans le contexte plus large de l'archéologie du changement climatique, un domaine en pleine expansion dans la discipline (Van de Noort 2011 ;Nimura et al 2017). L'article présenté ici met l'accent sur les pluralités de l'archéologie du changement climatique, dans le domaine de l'archéologie et dans le contexte de l'archéologie des communautés arctiques et subarctiques.…”
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“…La aplicación de estos métodos permite cuantificar, ponderar y visibilizar los factores naturales y antrópicos de degradación que afectan y destruyen el patrimonio (Accardo, 1992). Diversos trabajos han implementado la evaluación de riesgo de destrucción y la vulnerabilidad de sitios arqueológicos frente al cambio climático en paisajes costeros (Daly, 2014;Reeder-Myers, 2015;Dawson et al, 2017), así como la vulnerabilidad frente a terremotos (Andretta et al, 2017), el riesgo de inundación (Wang, 2015) y la incidencia e impacto del turismo de masas (Koren-Lawrence et al, 2020). Algunas investigaciones destacadas han analizado el riesgo y la vulnerabilidad de los sitios arqueológicos vinculados a la actividad agrícola, aunque generalmente se han centrado en amenazas concretas, como por ejemplo los efectos del arado sobre la integridad y dispersión de los materiales arqueológicos (e.g., Oxford Archaeology, 2002;Ots, 2008;Díez Martín, 2009;Miguez, 2012;Eftimoski et al, 2017;Noble et al, 2019;Koren-Lawrence et al, 2020).…”
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