{"id":1595,"date":"2024-06-11T09:48:03","date_gmt":"2024-06-11T00:48:03","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/c-mng.cwh.hokudai.ac.jp\/gi-core.oia\/gsi\/?p=1595"},"modified":"2024-06-12T10:03:05","modified_gmt":"2024-06-12T01:03:05","slug":"hokkaido-university-research-on-prehistoric-natural-disaster-wins-prestigious-prize","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/c-mng.cwh.hokudai.ac.jp\/gi-core.oia\/gsi\/news\/hokkaido-university-research-on-prehistoric-natural-disaster-wins-prestigious-prize.html","title":{"rendered":"GSI Member Professor Jordan’s Co-authored Research Paper on Prehistoric Natural Disaster in Japan Wins the Ben Cullen Prize 2024"},"content":{"rendered":"
A research paper titled ‘Disaster, survival and recovery: the resettlement of Tanegashima Island following the Kikai-Akahoya \u2018super-eruption\u2019, 7.3ka cal BP’ co-written by Hokkaido University GSI’s Professor Peter Jordan has been awarded the prestigious Ben Cullen Prize 2024 <\/strong>for making an \u201coutstanding contribution\u201d to World Archaeology. The wider research project investigates the extent to which past societies coped with massive shocks and sudden environmental catastrophes. The prize-winning paper examines the social and environmental impacts and legacies of the largest volcanic eruption ever to impact global humanity in the last 30,000 years.<\/p>\n This catastrophe was the Kikai-Akahoya (K-Ah) \u201csuper-eruption\u201d which destroyed much of East Asia around 7,300 years ago. Traditionally this event has been viewed as an \u201capocalyptic\u201d moment which swept away all life and left southern Japan empty and desolate for many hundreds of years, to the extent that it never fully recovered. Over the last three years, the team has been piecing together a much more nuanced story by carefully studying sites, landscapes and the material remains left behind by ancient communities located across the different disaster-impact zones.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n