Island tales: culturally-filtered narratives about island creation through land submergence incorporate millennia-old memories of postglacial sea-level rise

IF 1.8 2区 历史学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY WORLD ARCHAEOLOGY Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1080/00438243.2022.2077821
P. Nunn, M. Cook
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT In many long-enduring coastal cultures, there are stories – sometimes mythologized – about times when pieces of land became separated from mainlands by submergence, a process that created islands where none existed before. Using examples from northwest Europe and Australia, this paper argues that many such stories recall times, often millennia ago, when sea level in the aftermath of the Last Glaciation (last ice age) was rising and transforming coastal landscapes and their human uses in exactly the ways these stories describe. The possibility that these may have arisen from eyewitness accounts of these transformative processes, hitherto thought to be understandable only by scientific (palaeoenvironmental) reconstructions, should encourage more systematic investigations of such stories by scientists. It also suggests that science has traditionally underestimated the capacity of oral (pre-literate) cultures to acquire, encode and sustain their observations of memorable events with a high degree of replication fidelity.
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岛屿故事:经过文化过滤的关于岛屿形成的故事,通过陆地淹没,结合了千年前冰川后海平面上升的记忆
在许多历史悠久的沿海文化中,都有一些故事——有时是神话——讲述了陆地被淹没而与大陆分离的故事,这一过程创造了以前不存在的岛屿。本文以西北欧和澳大利亚的例子为例,认为许多这样的故事让人想起了几千年前的时代,当时末次冰期(最后一个冰期)之后的海平面正在上升,并以这些故事所描述的方式改变了沿海景观和人类对它们的利用。迄今为止,人们认为只有通过科学(古环境)重建才能理解这些变化过程,而这些变化可能来自目击者的描述,这种可能性应该鼓励科学家对这些故事进行更系统的调查。它还表明,科学传统上低估了口头(前文字)文化以高度复制保真度获取、编码和维持其对难忘事件的观察的能力。
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来源期刊
WORLD ARCHAEOLOGY
WORLD ARCHAEOLOGY ARCHAEOLOGY-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
32
期刊介绍: World Archaeology was established specifically to deal with archaeology on a world-wide multiperiod basis. Thirty years after it was founded it remains a leader in its field. The first three of the year"s quarterly issues are each dedicated to a particular theme of current interest. The fourth issue, Debates in World Archaeology, is a forum for debate, discussion and comment. All papers adopt a broad comparative approach, looking at important issues on a global scale. The members of the editorial board and the advisory board represent a wide range of interests and expertise and this ensures that the papers published in World Archaeology cover a wide variety of subject areas.
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