Affiliation:
1. Submerged Landscapes Research Centre, School of Archaeological and Forensic Sciences, University of Bradford, Richmond Road, Bradford BD7 1DP, UK
2. Royal HaskoningDHV, Westpoint, Peterborough Business Park, Lynch Wood, Peterborough PE2 6FZ, UK
Abstract
Development of the continental shelf has accelerated significantly as nations around the world seek to harness offshore renewable energy. Many areas marked for development align with submerged palaeolandscapes. Poorly understood and difficult to protect, these vulnerable, prehistoric landscapes provide specific challenges for heritage management. Indeed, there now appears to be a schism between what underwater cultural heritage policy intends and what it is achieving in practice. Shortcomings in international and national legislature ensures that large parts of the continental shelf, including areas under development, may have little or no legal protection. Increasingly impacted by extensive development, these unique cultural landscapes are ever more at risk. However, heritage challenges posed by such development also create opportunities. An immense amount of data is being generated by development, and there is an opportunity to establish broader cooperative relationships involving industrial stakeholders, national curators, government bodies, and heritage professionals. As a matter of urgency, the archaeological community must better engage with the offshore sector and development process. If achieved, we may revolutionise our knowledge of submerged prehistoric settlement and land use. Otherwise, our capacity to reconstruct prehistoric settlement patterns, learn from past climate change, or simply manage what are among the best-preserved postglacial landscapes globally may be irreparably undermined.
Funder
AHRC project
European Research Council
Reference149 articles.
1. Rockman, M., and Flatman, J. (2012). What the Walrus and the Carpenter Did Not Talk About: Maritime Archaeology and the Near Future of Energy. Archaeology in Society: Its Relevance in the Modern World, Springer.
2. Plets, R., Dix, J., and Bates, R. (2013). Marine Geophysics Data Acquisition, Processing and Interpretation Guidance Notes, English Heritage.
3. A late Pleistocene sea level stack;Spratt;Clim. Past,2016
4. Sea-level rise due to polar ice-sheet mass loss during past warm periods;Dutton;Science,2015
5. The next frontiers in research on submerged prehistoric sites and landscapes on the continental shelf;Sturt;Proc. Geol. Assoc.,2018