Temple landscapes: Fragility, change and resilience of Holocene environments in the Maltese Islands
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Temple landscapes: Fragility, change and resilience of Holocene environments in the Maltese Islands
By Charles French, Chris O. Hunt, Reuben Grima, Rowan McLaughlin, Simon Stoddart & Caroline Malone
The ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, cultural change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18), led by Caroline Malone (Queens University Belfast) has explored issues of environmental fragility and Neolithic social resilience and sustainability during the Holocene period in the Maltese Islands. This, the first volume of three, presents the palaeo-environmental story of early Maltese landscapes.
The project employed a programme of high-resolution chronological and stratigraphic investigations of the valley systems on Malta and Gozo. Buried deposits extracted through coring and geoarchaeological study yielded rich and chronologically controlled data that allow an important new understanding of environmental change in the islands. The study combined AMS radiocarbon and OSL chronologies with detailed palynological, molluscan and geoarchaeological analyses. These enable environmental reconstruction of prehistoric landscapes and the changing resources exploited by the islanders between the seventh and second millennia bc. The interdisciplinary studies combined with excavated economic and environmental materials from archaeological sites allows Temple landscapes to examine the dramatic and damaging impacts made by the first farming communities on the islands’ soil and resources. The project reveals the remarkable resilience of the soil-vegetational system of the island landscapes, as well as the adaptations made by Neolithic communities to harness their productivity, in the face of climatic change and inexorable soil erosion. Neolithic people evidently understood how to maintain soil fertility and cope with the inherently unstable changing landscapes of Malta. In contrast, second millennium bc Bronze Age societies failed to adapt effectively to the long-term aridifying trend so clearly highlighted in the soil and vegetation record. This failure led to severe and irreversible erosion and very different and short-lived socio-economic systems across the Maltese islands.
- Complete volume -Temple landscapes: Fragility, change and resilience of Holocene environments in the Maltese Islands
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 - The geology, soils and present-day environment of Gozo and Malta
- Chapter 2 - Chronology and stratigraphy of the valley systems
- Chapter 3 - The Holocene vegetation history of the Maltese Islands
- Chapter 4 - Molluscan remains from the valley cores
- Chapter 5 - The geoarchaeology of past landscape sequences on Gozo and Malta
- Chapter 6 - Cultural landscapes in the changing environments from 6000 to 2000 BC
- Chapter 7 - Cultural landscapes from 2000 BC onwards
- Chapter 8 - The intensification of the agricultural landscape of the Maltese Archipelago
- Chapter 9 - Locating potential pastoral foraging routes in Malta through the use of a Geographic Information System
- Chapter 10 - Settlement evolution in Malta from the Late Middle Ages to the early twentieth century and its impact on domestic space
- Chapter 11 - Conclusions
- References
- Appendix 1 - How ground penetrating radar (GPR) works
- Appendix 2 - Luminescence analysis and dating of sediments from archaeological sites and valley fill sequences
- Appendix 3 - Deep core borehole logs
- Appendix 4 - Granulometry of the deep cores
- Appendix 5 - The molluscan counts for the deep cores
- Appendix 6 - The borehole and test excavation profile log descriptions
- Appendix 7 - The detailed soil micromorphological descriptions from the buried soils and Ramla and Marsalforn valleys
- Appendix 8 - The micromorphological descriptions for the Malta deep cores of Xemxija 1, Wied Zembaq 1, Marsaxlokk and the base of the Salina Deep Core (21B)
- Appendix 9 - The charcoal data
- Index