Abstract

In addressing the current climate crisis, research into how past societies have coped with risk and ecological uncertainty can provide old solutions to new problems. Here, we examine how human niche construction can be seen as risk management in the face of uncertainty by exploring the spatial patterning of land-use activities over time. Dalarna county, an agriculturally marginal boreal forest environment, provides the opportunity for addressing change in terms of agricultural responses and other activities. C14 archaeological records complied by Dalarna Museum were the base of this analysis. The spatial and temporal components of these Boreal Forest records were analyzed in the open-source software QGIS, guided by a historical ecology framework. Human niches diversified and intensified during specific periods in the Boreal forest environment; our focus has been on how humans managed resource risk related to the ecological uncertainty within this forest environment characterized by long winters and short growing seasons. We conclude that constructed niches shaped the Boreal Forest, spanning its environmentally unique upland and lowland regions, into a more predictable environment. Tracking the diversity, multi-functionality, and intensity of these past land-use activities can provide insights for best practices in land management, not only for the Boreal Forest area, but also for elsewhere. These insights will assist in policy-making decisions, as the methodology is adaptable and replicable for various landscapes.

Highlights

  • IntroductionEnvironmental change has always been difficult to predict and prepare for

  • Published: 23 August 2021Environmental change has always been difficult to predict and prepare for

  • (~8800 BCE) were focused near present-day Leksand, or the southern edge of Lake Siljan, a water source recently made available by the retreating Weischeilian glacier

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Summary

Introduction

Environmental change has always been difficult to predict and prepare for. The current unprecedented effects of global warming mean looming changes will still be more challenging to prepare for. We are aware that the evolution of our land use has contributed to our current climatic situation. We must seek solutions in our uses of land to help mitigate global warming effects. The past can inform our thinking processes about the future and better inform our land use decisions with examples of how ecological uncertainty has been handled over time. Archaeological and paleoecological records show ‘completed’ information or at least the process of information over the long durée [1]

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