New project, led by Dr Linda Hulin, set to transform our understanding of the ancient sailing world

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The Practical Mariner Project explores the ancient sailing world in the Mediterranean from the perspective of mariners and their practical needs.  The team will compare and contrast wayfaring and place-making either side of the 3.2Ky climate event, i.e. 1500-800 BCE, during which rainfall declined sharply and state-run networks unravelled under pressure from a range of social and political factors, only to re-emerge in an altered and greatly extended form. Processes of wayfinding are of particular interest: did new routes emerge out of knowledge exchange with fishing communities or the persistence of low-level local and regional trade?

 

The team is combining agent-based modelling software with geographical information systems to animate the complex interaction between the carrying capacity of the land, the organisation of coastal communities and the practical requirement of sea-borne living. The availability of food, water, chandlery, and materials for repairs on land will be integrated with the presence of fish in the sea in different seasons and different points in the agricultural and maritime cycles. The aim is to assess the impact of climate change on sailing and fishing networks, particularly along the north African coast and on smaller islands across the Mediterranean.

 

Funder: Augmentum

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