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Toxic landscape: Excavating a polluted world

dc.contributor.authorStewart, Haeden
dc.contributor.editorMeharry, J. Eva
dc.contributor.editorHaboucha, Rebecca
dc.contributor.editorComer, Margaret
dc.date.accessioned2018-05-30T16:11:39Z
dc.date.available2018-05-30T16:11:39Z
dc.date.issued2017-11-20
dc.description.abstractStudies of the heritage industry, museology and archaeology and nationalism have highlighted vital ways in which the objects archaeologists study—far from being inert representations of the past—are lively, political, and potent in the present. This paper proposes that in order to investigate the long-term impacts of humans on the environment we as archaeologists must extend this reflexive turn to questions of ecological harm and pollution. First, archaeologists need to approach forms of human-derived pollutants as a type of artifact to attend to both the conditions of their production as well as the social effects of ecological degradation in the past. Second, archaeologists need to investigate the ongoing nature of this ecological degradation and its effects in the present. Drawing from my excavations of an early twentieth-century industrial site in Western Canada, I investigate how the rise of industrial-scale production in Edmonton, Alberta, remade the urban landscape by providing new consumer goods and manufacturing jobs, as well as—due to rampant pollution—remaking the environment and the ways in which the local population interacted with it. At the same time, I outline how the remains of this industry impacts the present as a form of pollution that affects local water quality and soil chemistry. Through these effects, industrial artifacts continue to actively transform the ecological relationships of humans and non-humans alike. In so doing, this project demonstrates the value of archaeology as a discipline whose focus on long temporalities and materiality provide unique insight into one of the most pressing contemporary political issues, ecological devastation and its social impact.
dc.identifier.doi10.17863/CAM.23660
dc.identifier.issn0261-4332
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/276362
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherArchaeological Review from Cambridge
dc.relation.ispartofseriesArchaeological Review from Cambridge: Volume 32.2: On the Edge of the Anthropocene?
dc.rightsAttribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
dc.subjectarchaeology of the contemporary
dc.subjectindustrial archaeology
dc.subjecthuman-environment interactions
dc.subjectwestern Canada
dc.titleToxic landscape: Excavating a polluted world
dc.typeArticle
prism.endingPage37
prism.issueIdentifier2
prism.publicationNameArchaeological Review from Cambridge
prism.startingPage25
prism.volume32

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