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Funded Projects › HORIZON

PacificPeopleForest · History, Archaeology, and Botany of Pacific Islands: assessing the Impacts of Early European colonialism on Peoples and Forests

HORIZONStatus: SIGNED1 November 202531 October 2029EU funding €1,752,028Call HORIZON-MSCA-2024-DN-01

PacificPeopleForest provides a critical new perspective on early Modern colonialism in the Pacific. Against mainstream assumptions that the 19th century marks the beginning of European impacts in the region, we rely on preliminary archaeological and historical evidence to propose that European contact in the 16th century had large demographic consequences undescribed so far, shifting the weight of human settlement from the inland areas to the coast until today. Early European colonialism also had unknown environmental impacts since the 16th and 17th centuries. As fluctuating demography led to the abandonment of inland areas, these were subsequently recolonized by forest. Thus, forests recognized today as native, might in fact be fairly recent, and heavily modified. Europeans introduced a very large number of plants that are nowadays not only staples, but also socially and symbolically key to most Pacific societies. These species had an unknown role in shaping the island ecosystems, and led to changes in sustainable agricultural practices. Both the early colonial demographic and environmental impacts remain largely unaddressed for the Pacific. The project will focus on the Mariana Islands to weave historical, archaeological, and plant-based scientific lines of evidence that uncover the history, extent and chronology of the impacts of European colonialism in the Pacific Islands. We will examine its influence on island demography, settlement patterns and vegetation dynamics, as plants are key elements of Pacific ecosystems. By integrating interdisciplinary perspectives in an innovative doctoral programme, this project seeks to offer empirically-based insights into the interplay between human populations and forest dynamics, around European contact. Providing fine-grained chronologies for demographic shifts and plant introductions can address current vulnerabilities in the archipelago, ie. exposure to climate change and demographic challenges faced by Pacific peoples.

Consortium · 12 organisations

coordinator

AGENCIA ESTATAL CONSEJO SUPERIOR DE INVESTIGACIONES CIENTIFICAS

ES · €564,376

participant

STICHTING NATURALIS BIODIVERSITY CENTER

NL · €610,572

associatedPartner

University of Guam

GU

associatedPartner

UNIVERSITEIT LEIDEN

NL

associatedPartner

UNIVERSIDAD DE JAEN

ES

associatedPartner

UNIVERSIDAD DE SANTIAGO DE COMPOSTELA

ES

associatedPartner

Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey

MX

associatedPartner

Department of Community and Cultural Affairs, Division of Historic Preservation

MP

associatedPartner

WAGENINGEN UNIVERSITY

NL

associatedPartner

Department of Land and Natural Resources

MP

participant

KATHOLIEKE UNIVERSITEIT LEUVEN

BE · €577,080

associatedPartner

Singapore Botanic Gardens

SG

Research fields

View the official record on CORDIS →

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