通过合作考古研究将知识编织在一起

IF 1.7 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q4 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Mountain Research and Development Pub Date : 2022-12-30 DOI:10.1659/mrd.2022.00014
Glen MacKay, L. Andrew, Naomi Smethurst, T. D. Andrews
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们描述了在加拿大西北地区中部麦肯齐山脉Shúhtagot'ine家园的驯鹿狩猎地点的合作考古研究。Shúhtagot'ine长老和文化资源管理者正在共同努力,调查因气候驱动的景观变化而面临破坏风险的重要文化场所。我们使用3个案例研究来说明,在长期的、基于地点的研究背景下,知识生产如何导致对祖先驯鹿狩猎地点的关键见解,包括多年生高山冰原和木材狩猎结构,以及如何利用这些知识来帮助保护Shúhtagot’ine文化景观中的重要价值。考古研究通过保护文化遗产、唤起“景观记忆”和解锁古代生物材料档案,促进土著文化景观的可持续性。知识共同生产的过程对所有参与者都是互利的,特别是当土著长老和青年在实地工作环境中聚集在一起时。
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Weaving Together Knowledge Through Collaborative Archaeological Research in the Shúhtagot'ine Cultural Landscape
We describe collaborative archaeological research on caribou hunting sites in the homeland of the Shúhtagot'ine in the central Mackenzie Mountains of Canada's Northwest Territories. Shúhtagot'ine Elders and cultural resource managers are working together to investigate important cultural places that are at risk of destruction from climate-driven landscape changes. We use 3 case studies to illustrate how knowledge production in the context of long-term, place-based research has led to key insights about ancestral caribou hunting sites, including perennial alpine ice patches and wood hunting structures, and how that knowledge is being mobilized to help conserve important values in the Shúhtagot'ine cultural landscape. Archaeological research promotes the sustainability of Indigenous cultural landscapes through the preservation of cultural heritage, via the recall of “landscape memories,” and by unlocking archives of ancient biological material. The process of knowledge coproduction is mutually beneficial for all participants, especially when Indigenous Elders and youth are brought together in fieldwork settings.
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来源期刊
Mountain Research and Development
Mountain Research and Development 地学-环境科学
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
18.80%
发文量
36
审稿时长
4.5 months
期刊介绍: MRD features three peer-reviewed sections: MountainDevelopment, which contains “Transformation Knowledge,” MountainResearch, which contains “Systems Knowledge,” and MountainAgenda, which contains “Target Knowledge.” In addition, the MountainPlatform section offers International Mountain Society members an opportunity to convey information about their mountain initiatives and priorities; and the MountainMedia section presents reviews of recent publications on mountains and mountain development. Key research and development fields: -Society and culture- Policy, politics, and institutions- Economy- Bio- and geophysical environment- Ecosystems and cycles- Environmental risks- Resource and land use- Energy, infrastructure, and services- Methods and theories- Regions
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