4.0 Article

Terra, Silva et Paludes. Assessing the Role of Alluvial Geomorphology for Late-Holocene Settlement Strategies (Po Plain - N Italy) Through Point Pattern Analysis

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL ARCHAEOLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 5, Pages 511-525

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14614103.2020.1740866

Keywords

Point pattern analysis; settlement strategies; Po plain; alluvial geomorphology; human resilience; landscape archaeology

Funding

  1. University of Milan (Italy)
  2. Italian Ministry of Education, University, and Research (MIUR) through the project 'Dipartimenti di Eccellenza 2018-2022' (WP4-Risorse del Patrimonio Culturale)

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This paper investigates how alluvial geomorphology affected human settlement strategies in the Po plain in Northern Italy during the Roman and Medieval periods, and evaluates the impact of different water management strategies on site distribution and flood risks. It also explores how socio-political factors in past societies played a crucial role in human resilience to geomorphological hazards and floods triggered by climate changes.
Fluvial environments represent complex human-water systems, as floodplains have always been among the most suitable environments for human subsistence. In this paper, we present one of the first attempts to investigate human adaptation to fluvial environments in the past using spatial statistics (Point Pattern Analysis). In particular, the paper addresses the influence of alluvial geomorphology on the settlement strategies in the Po plain (Northern Italy) during the Roman and the Medieval Period. The transition from Roman to the Middle Ages represented a crucial phase for the reorganisation of human settlement strategies in the Po Valley. The collapse of Roman hydrological systems in association with a cooling climate phase triggered waterlogging process in a large portion of the farmland: swamps became the typical features of the Medieval landscape. This paper aims to assess if the different water management strategies in the Roman and Medieval periods influenced the spatial distribution of sites, and to evaluate the relative importance of agricultural suitability over flood risks in the two historical phases. This research contributes to quantifying how the socio-political factors of past societies played a key role in human resilience to geomorphological hazards related to alluvial contexts and exceptional floods triggered by climate changes.

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