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Archaeological sites as Distributed Long-term Observing Networks of the Past (DONOP)

机译:考古位点作为过去的分布式长期观察网络(Donop)

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摘要

Archaeological records provide a unique source of direct data on long-term human-environment interactions and samples of ecosystems affected by differing degrees of human impact. Distributed long-term datasets from archaeological sites provide a significant contribution to establish local, regional, and continental-scale environmental baselines and can be used to understand the implications of human decision-making and its impacts on the environment and the resources it provides for human use. Deeper temporal environmental baselines are essential for resource and environmental managers to restore biodiversity and build resilience in depleted ecosystems. Human actions are likely to have impacts that reorganize ecosystem structures by reducing diversity through processes such as niche construction. This makes data from archaeological sites key assets for the management of contemporary and future climate change scenarios because they combine information about human behavior, environmental baselines, and biological systems. Sites of this kind collectively form Distributed Long-term Observing Networks of the Past (DONOP), allowing human behavior and environmental impacts to be assessed over space and time. Behavioral perspectives are gained from direct evidence of human actions in response to environmental opportunities and change. Baseline perspectives are gained from data on species, landforms, and ecology over timescales that long predate our typically recent datasets that only record systems already disturbed by people. Biological perspectives can also provide essential data for modern managers wanting to understand and utilize past diversity (i.e., trophic and/or genetic) as a way of revealing, and potentially correcting, weaknesses in our contemporary wild and domestic animal populations.
机译:考古记录提供了关于长期人体环境相互作用和受影响程度的人类影响程度的生态系统样本的独特数据来源。来自考古站点的分布式长期数据集提供了建立当地,区域和大陆环境基线的重大贡献,可以用于了解人为决策的影响及其对环境的影响以及它为人类提供的资源用。更深的时间环境基线对于资源和环境管理人员来说是必不可少的,以恢复生物多样性并在耗尽生态系统中建立弹性。人类行为可能通过减少利基结构等过程来重新组织生态系统结构的影响。这使得来自考古站点的数据来管理当代和未来的气候变化情景,因为它们结合了关于人类行为,环境基线和生物系统的信息。这类网站集体形成了过去(Donop)的分布式长期观察网络,允许在空间和时间内进行人类行为和环境影响。行为观点是从人类行动的直接证据获得,以应对环境机会和变革。基线视角是从物种,地貌和生态学的数据中获得的,这些时间尺度长时间地预测我们通常最近的数据集,这些数据集只记录了人们已经受到扰乱的系统。生物观点还可以为想要理解和利用过去的多样性(即营养和/或遗传)作为一种揭示和可能纠正,我们当代野生动物种群的缺点的方式,为现代经理提供必要数据。

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