Fire as a motor of rapid environmental degradation during the earliest peopling of Malta 7500 years ago

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TitreFire as a motor of rapid environmental degradation during the earliest peopling of Malta 7500 years ago
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuteursMarriner N., Kaniewski D., Gambin T., Gambin B., Vanniere B., Morhange C., Djamali M., Tachikawa K., Robin V., Rius D., Bard E.
JournalQUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
Volume212
Pagination199-205
Date PublishedMAY 15
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN0277-3791
Mots-clésFire, Holocene, Human impacts, Islands, Malta, Mediterranean, Neolithic, palaeoecology
Résumé

The Holocene colonisation of islands by humans has invariably led to deep-seated changes in landscape dynamics and ecology. In particular, burning was a management tool commonly used by prehistoric societies and it acted as a major driver of environmental change, particularly from the Neolithic onwards. To assess the role of early human impacts (e.g. livestock grazing, forest clearance and the cultivation of marginal land) in shaping ``pristine'' island landscapes, we here present a 350-year record of fire history and erosion from Malta, straddling the earliest peopling of the island. We show that recurrent anthropogenic burning related to Neolithic agro-pastoral practices began similar to 7500 years ago, with well-defined fire-return intervals (FRI) of 15-20 years that engendered erosion and rapid environmental degradation. As early as the Neolithic, this study implies that, in sensitive insular contexts, just a few generations of human activities could rapidly degrade natural islandscapes. (C) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

DOI10.1016/j.quascirev.2019.03.001