The voices of the sediments and Disaster Archaeology

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THE VOICES OF THE SEDIMENTS AS GEO-ARCHIVES OF PAST CATASTROPHES Amanda Laoupi (Archaeoenvironmentalist / Disaster Specialist) Centre for the Assessment of Natural Hazards and Proactive Planning - NTUA alaoupi@gmail.com

Abstract Environmental changes, either expressed as periodical phenomena with moderate character or as sudden, violent, and highly dangerous events, transform the natural ecosystems, rebuild the landscapes and forge new dynamics in human societies, by influencing the demographic stability, the socio-economic profile, the cultural trends and many investment strategies. This paper aims at : a) the filtration of various geological data / information before they reach the questionnaires of Disaster Archaeology’s topics, b) the elaboration of a flexible and reciprocal methodological framework within which both parts may function separately as well as synergistically. This framework should consist of several common hermeneutic ‘tools’ shared by both disciplines (stratigraphies, accretion, taphonomy, destruction layers, destruction markers/indicators). Complex geological mechanisms (i.e. volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, subsidence, soil liquefaction, landslides, pedogenesis, lacustrine, fluvial and deep-sea deposits) along with hydrometeorological and hydrogeological phenomena (i.e. tsunami, storms and hurricanes, glaciations, formation of peat bogs, sapropels, loess and karst, alluvia) either function as sedimentation’s formers, or as triggering factors for sediments’ redistribution into extended geographical areas. Finally, the authors suggest a more thoroughly organized approach and evaluation of disaster information hidden within the formation, spatio-temporal distribution and transformation of sediments, which may be of varied origin. This information should be grouped in four main categories (geological, paleontological, biochemical - physical). The fourth (archaeological - philological and historic- artistic - mythological) deserves special mention, because past disasters have been totally ignored by the majority of archaeologists and used in an uncritical way without being related to cultural change. Keywords:

Disaster Archaeology, destruction layers, archaeoenvironments, Sedimentation

1. Introduction: The links between Environmental Sedimentology and Disaster Archaeology The composition, texture and structure of sediments from the areas within or nearby archaeological sites contribute significantly to the reconstruction of paleoclimates, being also an invaluable source of information on archaeoenvironments, past human activities, subsistence-settlement patterns and environmental changes (Fekri, 1978; Barham and MacPhail , 1995). On the other hand, multidisciplinary projects around the globe have contributed to our knowledge of the processes involved in the formation and destruction of archaeological sites, entire civilizations and empires from Pleistocene Era onwards. Although sediment matrix is the more abundant element in archaeological sites, archaeologists are not fully aware of the real potential of sediment analysis. Even more, information on local or regional past phenomena (hazardous events, environmental changes or changes in the socio-economic structures that reflect environmental upheaval) is fragmented within hardly accessible data bases that are not easily retrievable. The afore-mentioned reality often leads to an unfortunate lack of ‘dialogue’ between archaeologists and geologists, or to a misunderstanding of sediments’ significance. The purpose of the present paper is to elaborate a flexible scheme of catalogued information on the potential of sediment analysis for disaster archaeologists (Torrence and Grattan, 2002), as sediments reflect a number of processes, including aeolian, fluvial, colluvial, biogenic, glacial, marine and human activity. This overview includes a methodological framework that groups various phenomena and mechanisms that produce and transport sediments, as well as it groups various indicators of past catastrophes trapped as geological information within the sediments. Moreover, examples for sedimentrelated disasters in cultural landscapes are presented, in order to elucidate their role and dynamics in the


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