Bridging theoretical gaps in geoarchaeology: archaeology, geoarchaeology, and history in the Yellow River valley, China
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ORIGINAL PAPER
Bridging theoretical gaps in geoarchaeology: archaeology, geoarchaeology, and history in the Yellow River valley, China Tristram R. Kidder & Haiwang Liu
Received: 15 March 2013 / Accepted: 18 February 2014 # Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2014
Abstract While geoarchaeology as a practice within archaeology grew out of many historical roots, a major role has been the explication of site formation processes and site-level contextual analysis. In recent years, geoarchaeological research has branched out to encompass larger geographic scales, and to play a greater role in environmental archaeological investigations. This paper argues that geoarchaeology has a great deal to contribute to the understanding of human history and to archaeological theory through the application of multiscalar approaches that place human behavior in a physical, environmental and ecological context and by creating linkages between physical processes and human responses. We use geoarchaeological data from the Yellow River valley to show that drainage/irrigation canal and bank/levee building had commenced in the lower reaches by ca. 2900–2700 cal B.P. The emphasis on flood plain flood control infrastructure was a result of long-term increases in sedimentation caused by large populations farming with increasingly efficient technologies in the fragile environments of the Loess Plateau. Ever increasing sedimentation set in motion a cycle of further investment in flood control works eventually leading to a massive flood catastrophe in the first 20 years of the first millennium A.D. as the Yellow River exceeded natural and human geomorphic thresholds that constrained it in its previous course. These floods arguably triggered the social and political events that brought down the Western Han Dynasty but the root causes are clearly more complex. Geoarchaeology thus contributes to
T. R. Kidder (*) Department of Anthropology, Washington University, St. Louis, MO, USA e-mail: [email protected] H. Liu Henan Provincial institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology, Zhengzhou, Henan, China
an understanding of the multiple causes and consequences of large-scale social and political collapse. Keywords Han Dynasty . Archaeology . Geoarchaeology . History . Yellow River . Floods . Rigidity traps The proliferation of specialized subfields in archaeology has led to an explosion of research while at the same time fostering the increasing fragmentation of specialists into intellectual domains that are ever more technically sophisticated but whose focused applications seem limited in their theoretical scope. A historian of the field scanning the pages of highly ranked publications would be understandably inclined to see the early part of the twenty-first century as a period of focus on what could loosely be considered mid-range archaeological theory. Geoarchaeological research is not exempt from this increasing emphasis on technical applications and mid-range assertions seemingly at the expense of higher-order theoretical generalizations or larg
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