Reflections on Living in Landscapes

Archaeological Perspectives on Hunter-Gatherer Landscapes and Resource Management in Interior North Norway - Marianne Skandfer

Bryan C. Hood [+-]
UiT - the Arctic University of Norway
Bryan C. Hood is Professor Emeritus of Archaeology in the Department of Archaeology, History, Religious Studies and Theology at UiT – The Arctic University of Norway, Tromsø, Norway. His research interests focus on Arctic and Subarctic hunter-gatherers, with fieldwork in northeastern Canada, Greenland, northern Norway and northwest Russia. He has published a book on the archaeology of northern Labrador, Canada, and papers on various aspects of the northern Norwegian Stone Age, including lithic procurement, Mesolithic settlement of the interior and coastal shellfish use. He is currently working on books dealing with Stone Age houses dated ca. 2000 BC in northeastern Norway and on the Kola Peninsula, Russia.
Marianne Skandfer [+-]
Tromsø Museum – The University Museum, UIT - The Arctic University of Norway
Marianne Skandfer is Professor of Archaeology at the Arctic University Museum at UiT – The Arctic University of Norway, Tromsø. Her research interest focus is on hunter-gatherer knowledge acquisition and transmission, specifically on prehistoric technology transmission and resource management including human–animal socialities. She initiated the LARM project, and has published several papers on, among other subjects, early ceramic technology, material culture and identity, and human–animal relations in northern, prehistoric, hunter-gatherer societies. She is currently primary investigator in a project looking at demography and settlement in Stone Age northern Norway.

Description

Human practices in the environment consist both of immediate observation and experience, as well as acting within an archive of inherited cultural knowledge that constitutes a conceptual framework for decision making and for talking about and reflecting upon the environment. Knowledge acquisition is both individual and experiential, updated ‘on the fly’, and it also has an extended temporal dimension that involves reproduction through cultural models and social relations. Thus, cultural models are not static determinative programs, but instead are constructed and reconstructed through experience. The physicality of the environment provides both constraints and opportunities for human action, as do the ontologies through which humans interact with various non-human entities. The knowledge accumulated through landscape practices is archived in socially distributed networks, and a primary instrument for this is human memory, which facilitates intergenerational transmission. But memory is also assisted by various material aides de mémoires – place names, artifacts and rock art representations – what some might call ‘distributed’ or ‘situated’ cognition. Some practices rather than others are reproduced preferentially over time, so we need to address what may have been ‘selected’ for the developmental pathways undergone by different practices. Archaeological interpretations of landscape are by necessity situated in our own ontologies, yet we must imagine past worlds of action based on other ontologies. In this chapter we outline some ways of thinking about how humans and other entities live in landscapes, with emphasis on archaeologically useful perspectives. We are particularly concerned with the forms of living termed hunting and herding. We begin with a general discussion of a ‘practice ecology’ or ‘ecology of practice’ that lays out some basic premises of the approach. The reflections presented here inform some of the other chapters in this volume, but they should not be taken as constituting a common framework. One of the central challenges is how a ‘relational’ perspective can be operationalized archaeologically. We provide some examples from place name studies, sacred sites and rock art.

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Citation

Hood, Bryan C.; Skandfer, Marianne. Reflections on Living in Landscapes. Archaeological Perspectives on Hunter-Gatherer Landscapes and Resource Management in Interior North Norway. Equinox eBooks Publishing, United Kingdom. p. 81-112 Dec 2024. ISBN 9781781798171. https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/view-chapter/?id=33991. Date accessed: 21 Nov 2024 doi: 10.1558/equinox.33991. Dec 2024

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