Table Of ContentAvant Propos ; Préface ; Introduction au premier volume - François Djindjian ; Le changement climatique: Un enjeu fondateur dans l'histoire des sciences préhistoriques - Marc-Antoine Kaeser ; Les méthodes de reconstitution des paléoclimats - François Djindjian ; Le climat a-t-il eu un impact sur le peuplement de l'Europe de l'Ouest des MIS 17 à 11 - Marie-Hélène Moncel, Jean-Jacques Bahain, Pierre Antoine, Amaëlle Landais, Alison Pereira, Anne-Marie Moigne, Vincent Lebreton, Nathalie Combourieu-Nebout, Pierre Voinchet, Christophe Falguères, Sébastien Nomade, Lucie Bazin ; Évolution des climats et de la biodiversité au cours des temps quaternaires dans le Sud-est de la France et en Ligurie - Henry de Lumley ; Changements climatiques et Peuplements en Sundaland - François Sémah et Anne-Marie Sémah ; Sociétés humaines et changements climatiques : une longue histoire l'homme de Neandertal pendant les stades isotopiques 11 à 4 - Pascal Depaepe ; Les peuplements préhistoriques pendant le stade isotopique 3 (57 000- 28 000 BP) - François Djindjian ; Les peuplements préhistoriques pendant le dernier maximum glaciaire (LGM) - François Djindjian ; Le repeuplement des territoires après le dernier maximum glaciaire - Lioudmila Iakovleva ; Living on the edge, or how resilient people settled the North - Iwona Sobkowiak-Tabaka ; Conclusions : L'influence des variations climatiques sur les sociétés de chasseurs cueilleurs au pléistocène - François Djindjian
SynopsisThe two volumesbring together the contributions of the members of the International Union of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences (UISPP), to a project launched in 2017, with the support of the International Academic Union (UAI), under the title Human societies facing climate change in prehistory and protohistory: from the origins of Humanity to the beginning of historical times . The first volume concerns prehistory from the earliest humans to the end of the Pleistocene, twelve thousand years ago. For three million years human societies have experienced a great alternation of glacial and interglacial periods. Which climates have been most favorable to human settlement? Which the least favorable? And did they involve the abandonment of territories, the collapse of societies and extinction of some human populations? When and in what climates did human groups colonize each of the continents of the planet? Is a period of climatic improvement with a hot and humid climate more or less favorable to the development of human societies than a period of climate depreciation? Is climate change a factor of change for human societies, forcing them to adapt and find sustainable solutions?, Is climate change a factor whose impact on human societies can be witnessed through time, forcing them to adapt and find sustainable solutions? This book is the first of two volumes exploring human societies facing climate change in pre and protohistory. Volume 1 concerns prehistory from the earliest humans to the end of the Pleistocene.