2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.ancene.2015.05.003
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Natural and human-induced prehistoric and historical soil erosion and landscape development in Southwestern Tennessee, USA

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Cited by 27 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Although cultural and ecological inheritances were heterogeneous in time and space, this trend appears as a convergent evolutionary pattern in several regions around world (Aikens and Lee, 2013;Braje and Erlandson, 2013a;Brewington et al, 2015;Laparidou and Rosen, 2015;McClure, 2013;Rick et al, 2013;Rosen et al, 2015;Streeter et al, 2015;Veena et al, 2014;Wagreich and Draganits, 2018). In the rest of the Americas, for instance, the acceleration of anthropogenic impacts on terrestrial and coastal ecosystems after the European colonization by the 16 th century is consistently recognized in North America (Dotterweich et al, 2014;Jones, 2015;Lightfoot et al, 2013;Stinchcomb et al, 2014), Amazonia (Arroyo-Kalin, 2012;Piperno et al, 2015;Roosevelt, 2013) and the Caribbean region (Rivera-Collazo, 2015). Thus, the coupled socio-environmental evolutionary approach adopted here complements previous efforts to visualize the Anthropocene in the deep-time (Armesto et al, 2010;Braje and Erlandson, 2013b;Crumley et al, 2015;Dearing et al, 2015;Verstraeten, 2014).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although cultural and ecological inheritances were heterogeneous in time and space, this trend appears as a convergent evolutionary pattern in several regions around world (Aikens and Lee, 2013;Braje and Erlandson, 2013a;Brewington et al, 2015;Laparidou and Rosen, 2015;McClure, 2013;Rick et al, 2013;Rosen et al, 2015;Streeter et al, 2015;Veena et al, 2014;Wagreich and Draganits, 2018). In the rest of the Americas, for instance, the acceleration of anthropogenic impacts on terrestrial and coastal ecosystems after the European colonization by the 16 th century is consistently recognized in North America (Dotterweich et al, 2014;Jones, 2015;Lightfoot et al, 2013;Stinchcomb et al, 2014), Amazonia (Arroyo-Kalin, 2012;Piperno et al, 2015;Roosevelt, 2013) and the Caribbean region (Rivera-Collazo, 2015). Thus, the coupled socio-environmental evolutionary approach adopted here complements previous efforts to visualize the Anthropocene in the deep-time (Armesto et al, 2010;Braje and Erlandson, 2013b;Crumley et al, 2015;Dearing et al, 2015;Verstraeten, 2014).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The data from Montgomery (2007b) that were updated using the values of García-Ruiz et al, (Massa et al, 2012). Compared to long-term natural events, however, one should consider that agricultural techniques produce this amount of sediments in shorter periods of time (Dotterweich et al, 2015). This difference in time scale can become a critical problem, especially considering that the natural production of soil is relatively slow and that soil might not be 'naturally' renewable on a societal time scale (Stockmann et al, 2014).…”
Section: Figure 14mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Soils are constantly changing by continuous or periodical redistribution and mixing of soil material. Humans have triggered and accelerated these processes since prehistoric times by agricultural practices (van Andel et al, 1990;Favis-Mortlock et al, 1997;Dreibrodt et al, 2010;Dotterweich, 2008;Dotterweich et al, 2014). Over time, human-induced erosion and deposition rates in hilly areas increased and larger areas of land were subjected to these soil redistribution processes (Dreibrodt et al, 2010;Kołodyńska-Gawrysiak et al, 2018;Kappler et al, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%