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Climate and society in Ireland: from prehistory to the present [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 456 pages, height x width: 257x206 mm, weight: 1520 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 07-Jun-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Royal Irish Academy
  • ISBN-10: 1911479733
  • ISBN-13: 9781911479734
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  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 41,71 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 456 pages, height x width: 257x206 mm, weight: 1520 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 07-Jun-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Royal Irish Academy
  • ISBN-10: 1911479733
  • ISBN-13: 9781911479734
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Can a long-term perspective on human adaptations to climate change inform Irelands response to the crisis we face today?

Climate and Society in Ireland is a collection of essays, commissioned by the Royal Irish Academy, that provides a multi-period, interdisciplinary perspective on one of the most important challenges currently facing humanity. Combining syntheses of existing knowledge with new insights and approaches, contributors explore the varied environmental, climatic and social changes that occurred in Ireland from early prehistory to the early 21st century. The essays in the volume engage with a diversity of pertinent themes, including the impact of climate change on the earliest human settlement of Ireland; weather-related food scarcities during medieval times that led to violence and plague outbreaks; changing representations of weather in poetry written in Ireland between 1600 and 1820; and how Ireland is now on the threshold of taking the radical steps necessary to shed its climate laggard status and embark on the road to a post-carbon society.

With contributions by Mįire Nķ Annrachįin, Katharina Becker, David M. Brown, Lucy Collins, Lisa Coyle McClung, Bruce M.S. Campbell, Rosie Everett, Benjamin Gearey, Raymond Gillespie, Seren Griffiths, James Kelly, Francis Ludlow, Meriel McClatchie, Conor Murphy, Simon Noone, Aaron Potito, Gill Plunkett, Phil Stastney, Graeme T. Swindles, John Sweeney, Graeme Warren.

Recenzijas

"The authors and editors of these essays have produced an excellent compilation volume. The variety of the themes is only surpassed by the amount of research and data comparison that has been achieved in many of the chapters. I highly recommend the book and I really enjoyed dipping in and out of the variety of material it contains". -- Peter Coxon * Holocene Book Review *

Introduction: constructing the history of climate and society in Ireland 1(1)
James Kelly
Tomas O. Carragain
Climate change and hunter gatherers in Ireland: problems, potentials and pressing research questions
1(22)
Graeme Warren
Tracing environmental, climatic and social change in Neolithic Ireland
23(28)
Meriel McClatchie
Aaron Potito
A question of scale? A review of interpretations of Irish peatland archaeology in relation to Holocene environmental and climate change
51(32)
Phil Stastney
Siccitas magna ultra modum: examining the occurrence and societal impact of droughts in prehistoric Ireland
83(22)
Gill Plunkett
David M. Brown
Graeme T. Swindles
On the brink of Armageddon? Climate change, the archaeological record and human activity across the Bronze Age-Iron Age transition in Ireland
105(24)
Benjamin Gearey
Katharina Becker
Rosie Everett
Seren Griffiths
Cultural change and the climate record in final prehistoric and early medieval Ireland
129(30)
Lisa Coyle McClung
Gill Plunkett
Climate, disease and society in late-medieval Ireland
159(94)
Bruce M.S. Campbell
Francis Ludlow
Climate, weather and social change in seventeenth-century Ireland
253(20)
Raymond Gillespie
Climate, weather and society in Ireland in the long eighteenth century: the experience of the later phases of the Little Ice Age
273(52)
James Kelly
`Nature herself seems in the vapours now': poetry and climate change in Ireland 1600-1820
325(24)
Lucy Collins
Seeing the natural world: Comhbha an Dulra
349(16)
Maire Nt Annrachain
Reconstruction of hydrological drought in Irish catchments (1850-2015)
365(26)
Simon Noone
Conor Murphy
Climate and society in modern Ireland: past and future vulnerabilities
391
John Sweeney
James Kelly MRIA, is Professor of History and head of the School of History and Geography at Dublin City University. He has served as co-editor of Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy: Archaeology, Culture, History, Literature since 2008. Tomįs Ó Carragįin MRIA, of the Archaeology Department, University College Cork, has served as co-editor of Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy since 2016.