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10 - LANDFORMS OF SHORES AND SHALLOW WATER

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2010

Dena F. Dincauze
Affiliation:
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
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Summary

The coast of a continent is a great boundary between two realms, land and water. Along this, as along other boundaries, two very different realms must adjust to each other, and conflict occurs.

FLINT AND SKINNER 1974: 245

The conflict of land and water creates the dynamism characteristic of shorelines, whether of rivers, oceans, or lakes. Humans are drawn to water because it is essential to the maintenance of organic life, and is therefore the location of basic resources. Archaeological sites on the shores of lakes and oceans present special opportunities and challenges for paleoenvironmental studies. Sites near water typically exhibit preservation conditions conducive to the survival of a range of organic materials. The sediments in and near them are likely to be organically enriched as well and hence excellent sources of climatic proxies and remains of plants and animals. Landforms shaped by waves and currents are typically informative about past climatic and geotectonic states and conditions. The dynamism of sedimentary regimes typically creates stratified sites, which are nevertheless subject to frequent erosion.

COASTAL GEOMORPHIC CONCEPTS AND PROCESSES

Landforms at the edge of water, like those on land, are shaped primarily by processes in the atmosphere, geosphere, hydrosphere, and cryosphere. The biosphere's influence is expressed mainly at small, local scales. The large-scale processes most responsible for changing the elevational relationships between land and water, and thus initiating erosion and landform evolution, are tectonism and climate change, and their combined product – eustasy.

Type
Chapter
Information
Environmental Archaeology
Principles and Practice
, pp. 227 - 250
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2000

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