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journal contribution
posted on 2020-03-25, 16:05authored byGraeme Barker, Chris Hunt, Huw Barton, Chris Gosden, Sam Jones, Lindsay Lloyd-Smith, Lucy Farr, Borbala Nyiri, Shawn O'Donnell
Borneo has a 50,000-year record of Homo sapiens' interactions with rainforest on the coastal lowlands assembled especially by the interdisciplinary investigation of the archaeology and palaeoecology of the Niah Caves on the coastal plain of Sarawak (Barker et al., 2007; Barker, 2013). More recent work by many of the same team in the interior of Borneo, in the Kelabit Highlands of Sarawak, has combined those approaches with ethnography and anthropology to investigate recent and present-day, as well as past, human-rainforest interactions. In combination, the two projects indicate that the present-day rainforests of Borneo are the product of a deep ecological history related to both natural factors such as climate change and cultural factors such as how different groups of people chose to extract their livelihoods from the forest, including in ways that do not have simple analogies with the subsistence activities of present-day rainforest foragers and farmers in Borneo.
Funding
Sarawak Museum, Arts and Humanities Research Board (APN10872), Arts and Humanities Research Council (APN12333, APN16175, E5105741), Association of Southeast Asianists UK, British Academy, British Academy's Committee for Southeast Asian Studies, Natural Environment Research Council (Radiocarbon Facility)
History
Citation
Barker, G., Hunt, C., Barton, H., Gosden, C., Jones, S., Lloyd-Smith, L., Farr, L., et al. (2016). The ‘cultured rainforests’ of Borneo. Quaternary International https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2016.08.018