771
Views
14
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Reports

Severe Weather and the Reliability of Desk-Based Vulnerability Assessments: The Impact of Hurricane Maria to Puerto Rico’s Coastal Archaeology

Pages 244-263 | Received 05 Oct 2018, Accepted 06 Jan 2019, Published online: 19 Mar 2019

References

  • Adger, W. N., J. Barnett, F. S. Chapin III, and H. Ellemor. 2011. This must be the place: Underrepresentation of Identity and meaning in climate change decision-making. Global Environmental Politics 11(2):1–25.
  • Alvarado León, G. E. 2017a. El huracán María deja al descubierto un yacimiento en Barceloneta. El Nuevo Dia, Nov. 8.
  • Alvarado León, G. E. 2017b. El yacimiento que el huracán María dejó al descubierto es precolombino. El Nuevo Dia, Nov. 9.
  • Alvarado León, G. E. 2018a. Las playas de Puerto Rico perdieron elevación tras el paso de María. El Nuevo Dia, Feb. 4.
  • Alvarado León, G. E. 2018b. El impacto de los huracanes Irma y María en los arrecifes es “bestial.” El Nuevo Dia, March 11.
  • Anderson, D. G., T. G. Bissett, S. J. Yerka, J. J. Wells, E. C. Kansa, S. W. Kansa, K. Noack Myers, R. C. DeMuth, and D. A. White 2017. Sea-level rise and archaeological site destruction: An example from the southeastern United States using DINAA (Digital Index of North American Archaeology). PLoS ONE 12(11):1–25.
  • Bird, M. K 1992. The Impact of tropical cyclones on the archaeological record: An Australian example. Archaeology in Oceania 27(2):75–86.
  • Cox, R. S, and K. E. Perry. 2011. Like a fish out of water: Reconsidering disaster recovery and the role of place and social capital in community disaster resilience. American Journal of Community Psychology 48:395–411.
  • Crane, T. A. 2010. Of models and meanings: Cultural resilience in social–ecological systems. Ecology And Society 15(4):19.
  • Dawson, T. 2013. Erosion and coastal archaeology: Evaluating the threat and prioritising action. Ancient Maritime Communities and the Relationship between People and Environment along the European Atlantic Coasts: Proceedings of the HOMER 2011 Conference, Vannes, France, 28 Sep - 1 Oct 2011 3:77–83.
  • Dawson, T. 2016. Community rescue: Saving sites from the sea. Arqueologia Publica: Online Journal in Public Archaeology 6(2):5–42.
  • Dawson, T., J. Hambly, and E. Graham. 2017. A central role for communities: Climate change and coastal heritage management in Scotland. In Public Archaeology and Climate Change (T. Dawson, C. Nimura, E. López-Romero, and M.-Y. Daire, eds.):23–34. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
  • Ezcurra, P. and I. C. Rivera-Collazo. 2018. An assessment of the impacts of climate change on Puerto Rico’s cultural heritage with a case study on sea-level rise. Journal of Cultural Heritage 32(2017):198–209.
  • Fitzpatrick, S. M. 2012. On the shoals of giants: Natural catastrophes and the overall destruction of the Caribbean’s archaeological record. Journal of Coastal Conservation 16(2):173–186.
  • Hambrecht, G., and M. Rockman. 2017. International approaches to climate change and cultural heritage. American Antiquity 82(04):627–641.
  • Hardy, D., H. Lazrus, M. Mendez, B. Orlove, I. Rivera-Collazo, J. T. Roberts, M. Rockman, K. Thomas, B. P. Warner, and R. Winthrop. 2018. Social Vulnerability: Social Science Perspectives on Climate Change, Part 1. Washington, DC: USGCRP Social Science Coordinating Committee.
  • Hollesen, J., M. Callanan, T. Dawson, R. Fenger-Nielsen, T. M. Friesen, A. M. Jensen, A. Markham, V. V. Martens, V. V. Pitulko, and M. Rockman. 2018. Climate change and the deteriorating archaeological and environmental archives of the Arctic. Antiquity 92(363):573–586.
  • Ives, T. H., K. A. McBride, and J. N. Waller. 2018. Surveying coastal archaeological sites damaged by Hurricane Sandy in Rhode Island, USA. Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology 13(1):66–89.
  • Ktalav, I. 2015. Button waste and religious souvenirs in the Holy Land, during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Quaternary International 390:133–145.
  • Mallinis, G., I. Mitsopoulos, E. Beltran, and J. G. Goldammer. 2016. Assessing wildfire risk in cultural heritage properties using high spatial and temporal resolution satellite imagery and spatially explicit fire simulations: The case of Holy Mount. Forests 7(46):1–19.
  • Mayes, T. 2018. Why Old Places Matter. How Historic Places Affect Identity and Well-Being. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield.
  • National Parks Service. 2010. National Park Service Climate Change Response Strategy. Fort Collins, CO: National Park Service Climate Change Response Program.
  • O’Rourke, M. J. E. 2017. Archaeological site vulnerability modelling: The influence of high impact storm events on models of shoreline erosion in the western Canadian Arctic. Open Archaeology 3:1–16.
  • Peres, T. M., and A. Deter-Wolf. 2018. Finding the positive in the negative natural disasters. Archaeology and data collection in the face of natural disasters. Advances in Archaeological Practice 6(4):288–297.
  • Rainey, F. G. 1940. Porto Rican archaeology. In Scientific Survey of Porto Rico and the Virgin Islands, Vol. 38, Part 1. New York: New York Academy of Sciences.
  • Reeder, L. A, T. C. Rick, and J. M. Erlandson. 2012. Our disappearing past: A GIS analysis of the vulnerability of coastal archaeological resources in California’s Santa Barbara Channel region. Journal of Coastal Conservation(16):187–197.
  • Reeder-Myers, L. A. 2015. Cultural heritage at risk in the twenty-first century: A Vulnerability assessment of coastal archaeological sites in the United States. The Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology 10(3):436–445.
  • Reimann, L. 2018. Mediterranean UNESCO World Heritage at risk rise. Nature Communications 9(4161):1–11.
  • Rick, T. C., and S. M. Fitzpatrick. 2012. Archaeology and coastal conservation. Journal of Coastal Conservation 16(2):135–136.
  • Rivera-Collazo, I. 2015. Por el camino verde: Long-term tropical socioecosystem dynamics and the Anthropocene as seen from Puerto Rico. The Holocene 25(10):1604–1611.
  • Rivera-Collazo, I., C. Rodríguez-Franco, and J. J. Garay-Vázquez. 2018. A deep-time socioecosystem framework to understand social vulnerability on a tropical island. Environmental Archaeology 23(1):97–108.
  • Rockman, M. 2012. The necessary roles of archaeology in climate change mitigation and adaptation. In Archaeology in Society: Its Relevance in the Modern World (M. Rockman and J. Flatman, eds.):193–215. New York: Springer Science + Business Media.
  • Rockman, M. 2015. An NPS framework for addressing climate change with cultural resources. The George Wright Forum 32(1):37–50.
  • Rockman, M., M. Morgan, S. Ziaja, G. Hambrecht, and A. Meadow. 2016. Cultural Resources Climate Change Strategy. Washington, DC: Cultural Resources, Partnerships, and Science and Climate Change Response Program, National Park Service.
  • Rouse, I. 1952. Porto Rican Prehistory: Introduction, Excavations in the West and the North. Scientific Survey of Porto Rico and Virgin Islands, Vol. 13, Part 3. New York: New York Academy of Sciences.
  • Sesana, E., A. Gagnon, C. Bertolin, and J. Hughes. 2018. Adapting cultural heritage to climate change risks: Perspectives of Cultural heritage experts in Europe. Geosciences 8(8):305.
  • Tarragüel, A. A., B. Krol, and C. Van Westen. 2012. Analysing the possible impact of landslides and avalanches on cultural heritage in Upper Svaneti, Georgia. Journal of Cultural Heritage 13(4):453–461.
  • Thomas, K., R. D. Hardy, H. Lazrus, M. Mendez, B. Orlove, I. Rivera-Collazo, J. T. Roberts, M. Rockman, B. P. Warner, and R. Winthrop. 2018. Explaining differential vulnerability to climate change: A social science review. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change: 1–18. doi: 10.1080/14614103.2017.1342397.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.