| Literature DB >> 33762769 |
Dagomar Degroot1, Kevin Anchukaitis2,3, Martin Bauch4, Jakob Burnham5, Fred Carnegy6, Jianxin Cui7, Kathryn de Luna5, Piotr Guzowski8, George Hambrecht9, Heli Huhtamaa10,11, Adam Izdebski12,13, Katrin Kleemann14,15, Emma Moesswilde5, Naresh Neupane16, Timothy Newfield5,16, Qing Pei17, Elena Xoplaki18,19, Natale Zappia20,21.
Abstract
A large scholarship currently holds that before the onset of anthropogenic global warming, natural climatic changes long provoked subsistence crises and, occasionally, civilizational collapses among human societies. This scholarship, which we term the 'history of climate and society' (HCS), is pursued by researchers from a wide range of disciplines, including archaeologists, economists, geneticists, geographers, historians, linguists and palaeoclimatologists. We argue that, despite the wide interest in HCS, the field suffers from numerous biases, and often does not account for the local effects and spatiotemporal heterogeneity of past climate changes or the challenges of interpreting historical sources. Here we propose an interdisciplinary framework for uncovering climate-society interactions that emphasizes the mechanics by which climate change has influenced human history, and the uncertainties inherent in discerning that influence across different spatiotemporal scales. Although we acknowledge that climate change has sometimes had destructive effects on past societies, the application of our framework to numerous case studies uncovers five pathways by which populations survived-and often thrived-in the face of climatic pressures.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33762769 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03190-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 69.504