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This book charts the environmental transformation of Scotland from
the end of the ice age in an empty land 10,000 years ago to the
Viking invasions of an established society 9,000 years later. When
the icefields and glaciers disappeared forests covered the land and
sea level rose to create the Hebridean islands. Elk, aurochs, bear,
boar, red deer, beaver and horse crossed the land bridge from
Europe to colonise the land, first followed by hunter gatherers and
later by waves of Celts, Romans, Scots, and Normans, each marking
the landscape in distinctive ways. This book brings together
environmental, ecological, historical, geological, and
archaeological approaches to show how changing climatic conditions
and this sequence of cultural impacts shaped the succession of
Scottish landscapes which have led to its present unique,
beautiful, fleeting forms and variety. The seventeen authors are
scholars from a range of fields, all writing for students and
general readers. The first six chapters consider interactions of
human ecology, climate, landscape, soils, vegetation and faunal
change. The next seven are a chronological narrative history of
Scotland's environment over 9,000 years. The final chapter unites
these systematic and historical approaches. The book is extensively
illustrated with maps and photographs. The paperback edition
includes a new and extensive guide to further reading.
This book presents a fresh overview of the Vikings from both
conceptual and material perspectives. The prevailing image of a
Viking is frequently that of a fierce male, associated with
military expansion and a distinctive material culture. In an
engaging survey, Saebjorg Walaker Nordeide and Kevin J. Edwards
analyse Viking religion, economic life and material culture in and
beyond the Scandic homelands. Although there is a conventional
Viking Age timeframe of ca. AD 800 to 1050 (the Scandinavians are
usually associated with hit-and-run attacks beginning with the raid
on the Abbey of Lindisfarne in 797), their military expeditions
actually started earlier and were directed eastwards. Scandinavians
moved beyond the Baltic coast to Constantinople. To the south and
west, France, Iberia, and the islands of Great Britain and Ireland
witnessed, variously, trade, invasion, and settlement. The
essentially unpopulated islands of the North Atlantic Ocean were
subjected to a Norse-led diaspora with the Scandinavian settlers
perhaps over-reaching themselves in Newfoundland and ultimately
abandoning their Greenlandic colonies. The Vikings have maintained
a resonance in the popular imagination to the present day.
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