Year
2019
Units
4.5
Contact
6 x 2-hour lectures per semester
6 x 2-hour laboratories per semester
Prerequisites
18 units of archaeology topics
Assessment
Assignment(s), Tutorial presentation, Tutorial participation
Topic description
Environmental change is perceived as a major risk for many human societies around the world. Yet, contemporary societies are certainly not the first to experience ‘environmental change’, and nor are they the first to initiate it. This topic draws on decades of archaeological research into the complexities of human-environment relations in the past, with a particular focus on the traditional terrain of the archaeologist: those societies whose histories lay beyond access via historical documentary records. Drawing on global case studies, we will discuss how environments have changed throughout the past 100,000 years and how a range of different human societies have perceived, responded to and altered their environments through time.
Educational aims
This topic aims to:

  • Introduce students to the history of environmental archaeology;

  • Improve students’ knowledge of datasets and debates relating to global environmental change over the past 100,000 years;

  • Build in-depth knowledge of how a range of different human societies might have perceived, responded to, and altered environments in the past;

  • Enhance familiarity with theoretical debates in archaeology, anthropology and related fields about the relationships between humans and the environment;

  • Reflect on contemporary debates about environmental change and the role of archaeological research in these debates
Expected learning outcomes
For successful completion of this topic students will:

  • Demonstrate knowledge of key models for long-term global environmental dynamics over the past 100,000 years;

  • Demonstrate an awareness of major theoretical debates and methodological approaches within the field of environmental archaeology;

  • Evidence critical, in-depth thinking about a range of global case studies on human-environmental interactions;