Abstract
This paper reviews the methodological and practical issues relevant to the ways in which natural scientists, historians and archaeologists may collaborate in the study of past climatic changes in the Mediterranean basin. We begin by discussing the methodologies of these three disciplines in the context of the consilience debate, that is, attempts to unify different research methodologies that address similar problems. We demonstrate that there are a number of similarities in the fundamental methodology between history, archaeology, and the natural sciences that deal with the past (“palaeoenvironmental sciences”), due to their common interest in studying societal and environmental phenomena that no longer exist. The three research traditions, for instance, employ specific narrative structures as a means of communicating research results. We thus present and compare the narratives characteristic of each discipline; in order to engage in fruitful interdisciplinary exchange, we must first understand how each deals with the societal impacts of climatic change. In the second part of the paper, we focus our discussion on the four major practical issues that hinder communication between the three disciplines. These include terminological misunderstandings, problems relevant to project design, divergences in publication cultures, and differing views on the impact of research. Among other recommendations, we suggest that scholars from the three disciplines should aim to create a joint publication culture, which should also appeal to a wider public, both inside and outside of academia.
Highlights
This paper offers a discussion of the theoretical and practical issues involved in collaboration among the natural sciences and the humanities, focused on the study of human perceptions and actions in relation to climate and environmental change in the past
The differences in the rhetoric of history, archaeology and the palaeosciences are already apparent in the overarching narratives used by researchers from each of these disciplines; in the case of climate change and its impact on society, historians, archaeologists and scientists all conceive of their subject in different ways
If we focus on climate as such, major historical publications about its role in history have only started to appear during the last decade, and this applies to the Mediterranean
Summary
This paper offers a discussion of the theoretical and practical issues involved in collaboration among the natural sciences and the humanities (or, the social sciences, as is the case for much archaeological research), focused on the study of human perceptions and actions in relation to climate and environmental change in the past. In order to fully comprehend the interplay between climate, environment, and society, and to take account of the perspectives of all the disciplines involved and of the evidence they use, one needs to integrate the approaches of not just science and archaeology, and of history and other disciplines that are primarily concerned with written sources It is this methodological challenge that makes the Mediterranean special as compared to many other regions of the world (cf Cooper and Peros, 2010; Westerberg et al, 2010; Kennett et al, 2012; Turner and Sabloff, 2012; Lane et al, 2014). The multidimensionality and great temporal depth of the Mediterranean call for a holistic and multidisciplinary study requiring collaboration between a variety of research disciplines from both the natural sciences and the humanities-social sciences
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