School of History, Classics & Archaeology

Grand Challenge Agendas in Environmental Archaeology Conference 2017

HCA AEA
HCA AEA

How do we approach today’s great themes in international environmental archaeology? How will this feed into the next research agenda? What are environmental archaeology’s grand challenges? ‘Grand challenges for archaeology’ have recently been proposed to focus the disciplines efforts and capabilities on the most important scientific challenges (Kintigh et al. 2014, PNAS 111, 879-80). Those identified focus on investigating the dynamics of complex socio-ecological systems, addressing key questions of emergence, complexity, demography, mobility, identity, resilience, and human-environment interactions. Environmental archaeology is ideally situated to contribute directly to these challenges, concerned, as it is, with the human ecology of the past – the relationship between past human populations and their physical, biological and socio-economic environments – through the analysis and interpretation of animal and plant remains within the depositional environment of the archaeological site and its surrounds. These approaches allow analysis of the dynamics of socio-ecological systems at varying spatial and temporal scales. Combined with the continued advancement of scientific methodological applications this is enabling increasingly powerful insights into human paleoecology, for example via analyses of palaeodiets, disease ecology, and past climatic change. Particular challenges lie in how to integrate data generated from diverse methodological approaches, and how to model and test cultural and ecological agency in the past, and how to tap the full potential that lies in increasingly large and disparate datasets being generated by the different practitioners of environmental archaeology. Public and fiscal responsibility also challenges environmental archaeological research to contribute to debates of relevance to the modern world, with its important potential insights on human-environment interactions, biodiversity, food security, and societal resilience.

This conference seeks to explore the grand challenge agendas for environmental archaeology that confront its methods, approaches, contributions and relevance, including (but not limited to):

  • the ways in which the discipline can contribute to the major research foci of archaeology
  • advances in method, and integration of methods, that are permitting more robust and nuanced insights in these areas
  • approaches to modelling and testing past socio-ecological relationships, and exploring issues of cause and effect in these systems
  • the ways in which environmental archaeological research is relevant and contributes to the contemporary world

Conference Programme

Early registration costs:

Student, AEA member: £60

Student, non-AEA member: £70

AEA member: £80

Non-AEA member: £90

Early registration will open soon and run to 10 November 2017, after this date a late booking fee will apply.

Please email AEA2017@ed.ac.uk with any enquiries.

Accommodation

If conference attendees wish to book University of Edinburgh (Edinburgh First) accommodation (bookable here: www.book.accom.ed.ac.uk) please email AEA2017@ed.ac.uk to receive the promotional code to receive a 15% discount.

Conference organisers:

Dr Robin Bendrey, School of History, Classics and Archaeology, University of Edinburgh

Professor Andrew Dugmore, School of Geosciences, University of Edinburgh

Dr Eva Panagiotakopulu, School of Geosciences, University of Edinburgh

Dr Xavier Rubio-Campillo, School of History, Classics and Archaeology, University of Edinburgh

Organising Committee

Andrzej Romaniuk, Katharine Steinke, Angela Boyle, Roxanne Guildford (University of Edinburgh)

Acknowledgements

We would particularly like to thank Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports (Elsevier), Historic Environment Scotland (HES), the Scottish Archaeological Research Framework (ScARF), International Journal of Osteoarchaeology (Wiley), and the National Museums of Scotland for conference sponsorship and support.

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Grand Challenge Agendas in Environmental Archaeology Conference 2017

The Association for Environmental Archaeology Conference 2017 seeks to explore the grand challenge agendas for environmental archaeology that confront its methods, approaches, contributions and relevance. (Published 24 October, 2017)

Meadows Lecture Theatre, William Robertson Wing, Doorway 4, Teviot Place, Edinburgh, EH8 9AG