Mastering the land: mapping and metrologies in Aotearoa New Zealand

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

Mastering the land : mapping and metrologies in Aotearoa New Zealand. / Christensen, Andreas Aagaard.

Making a new land: environmental histories of New Zealand. ed. / Eric Pawson; Tom Brooking. 2. ed. University of Otago Press, 2013. p. 310-327.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Christensen, AA 2013, Mastering the land: mapping and metrologies in Aotearoa New Zealand. in E Pawson & T Brooking (eds), Making a new land: environmental histories of New Zealand. 2. edn, University of Otago Press, pp. 310-327. https://doi.org/10.13140/2.1.2825.3764

APA

Christensen, A. A. (2013). Mastering the land: mapping and metrologies in Aotearoa New Zealand. In E. Pawson, & T. Brooking (Eds.), Making a new land: environmental histories of New Zealand (2. ed., pp. 310-327). University of Otago Press. https://doi.org/10.13140/2.1.2825.3764

Vancouver

Christensen AA. Mastering the land: mapping and metrologies in Aotearoa New Zealand. In Pawson E, Brooking T, editors, Making a new land: environmental histories of New Zealand. 2. ed. University of Otago Press. 2013. p. 310-327 https://doi.org/10.13140/2.1.2825.3764

Author

Christensen, Andreas Aagaard. / Mastering the land : mapping and metrologies in Aotearoa New Zealand. Making a new land: environmental histories of New Zealand. editor / Eric Pawson ; Tom Brooking. 2. ed. University of Otago Press, 2013. pp. 310-327

Bibtex

@inbook{400f73886635471a8d3b66297635ac8c,
title = "Mastering the land: mapping and metrologies in Aotearoa New Zealand",
abstract = "The environmental history of New Zealand is one of the clearest and most recent examples of the way humans make a home for themselves in newly explored territory. New Zealand was the last major land area in the world to be colonised by people and, given its extraordinary natural history, the first settlers could hardly have been more surprised when they arrived in the thirteenth century. At the time of this first Polynesian settlement, New Zealand was a land not only without humans, but without any terrestrial mammals except for a few species of bats. In their absence the avifauna had proliferated, and in ecosystems developed with birds as the only large grazers, the flora had developed in ways not seen anywhere else, leaving only limited plant foods available for humans. This must have made New Zealand not only a challenging but also an initially incomprehensible land for newly arrived Polynesians as well as Europeans. This fact makes their success in forging cultural landscapes from the new land all the more interesting for students of environmental history. As an example of such processes, New Zealand illustrates the way human newcomers learn to master an environment, change the land and its resources, and in the process change themselves. From the {\textquoteleft}fragile plenty{\textquoteright} of the first Māori to the cultural landscapes in which they lived at the time of the first European discovery, to the settler economy and the modern society of today, New Zealand is an example of the way a society develops on the basis of natural resources which change as the society itself changes. Newcomers to any environment meet it with a set of technologies and a culture which they bring with them and which changes continuously, as it aligns with experience gathered in that environment. The environmental histories told from a multiplicity of viewpoints in this volume are contributions to our understanding of this central dialectical relationship, which over time led to the creation of the landscapes and ecosystems of contemporary New Zealand. This chapter picks up on a theme which has been touched on in most of the preceding chapters, but which has not been fully unfolded. It argues that while conditions and events changed the relationship between society and environments repeatedly, the history of New Zealand was always a history of spaces and of the ability of its inhabitants to control space and resources cognitively, socially and physically. With this perspective in mind the chapter outlines the history of production of spatial knowledge about the environments of New Zealand. This is not only to provide an overview of understandings of the environment, but also to investigate and illustrate the close ties between knowledge and practice: between understanding the environment and changing it.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, Anthropology of the moderns, metrology, New Zealand, Cartography, Historical geography, Faculty of Science, Land use changes, land use patterns, Land use systems, Landscape, Landscape management, Environmental management, Environmental Monitoring, Environmental history, Faculty of Humanities, Representation, Territory, Spatial competence, Territorial competence, State formation",
author = "Christensen, {Andreas Aagaard}",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.13140/2.1.2825.3764",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-1-877578-52-6",
pages = "310--327",
editor = "Eric Pawson and Tom Brooking",
booktitle = "Making a new land",
publisher = "University of Otago Press",
address = "New Zealand",
edition = "2.",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Mastering the land

T2 - mapping and metrologies in Aotearoa New Zealand

AU - Christensen, Andreas Aagaard

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - The environmental history of New Zealand is one of the clearest and most recent examples of the way humans make a home for themselves in newly explored territory. New Zealand was the last major land area in the world to be colonised by people and, given its extraordinary natural history, the first settlers could hardly have been more surprised when they arrived in the thirteenth century. At the time of this first Polynesian settlement, New Zealand was a land not only without humans, but without any terrestrial mammals except for a few species of bats. In their absence the avifauna had proliferated, and in ecosystems developed with birds as the only large grazers, the flora had developed in ways not seen anywhere else, leaving only limited plant foods available for humans. This must have made New Zealand not only a challenging but also an initially incomprehensible land for newly arrived Polynesians as well as Europeans. This fact makes their success in forging cultural landscapes from the new land all the more interesting for students of environmental history. As an example of such processes, New Zealand illustrates the way human newcomers learn to master an environment, change the land and its resources, and in the process change themselves. From the ‘fragile plenty’ of the first Māori to the cultural landscapes in which they lived at the time of the first European discovery, to the settler economy and the modern society of today, New Zealand is an example of the way a society develops on the basis of natural resources which change as the society itself changes. Newcomers to any environment meet it with a set of technologies and a culture which they bring with them and which changes continuously, as it aligns with experience gathered in that environment. The environmental histories told from a multiplicity of viewpoints in this volume are contributions to our understanding of this central dialectical relationship, which over time led to the creation of the landscapes and ecosystems of contemporary New Zealand. This chapter picks up on a theme which has been touched on in most of the preceding chapters, but which has not been fully unfolded. It argues that while conditions and events changed the relationship between society and environments repeatedly, the history of New Zealand was always a history of spaces and of the ability of its inhabitants to control space and resources cognitively, socially and physically. With this perspective in mind the chapter outlines the history of production of spatial knowledge about the environments of New Zealand. This is not only to provide an overview of understandings of the environment, but also to investigate and illustrate the close ties between knowledge and practice: between understanding the environment and changing it.

AB - The environmental history of New Zealand is one of the clearest and most recent examples of the way humans make a home for themselves in newly explored territory. New Zealand was the last major land area in the world to be colonised by people and, given its extraordinary natural history, the first settlers could hardly have been more surprised when they arrived in the thirteenth century. At the time of this first Polynesian settlement, New Zealand was a land not only without humans, but without any terrestrial mammals except for a few species of bats. In their absence the avifauna had proliferated, and in ecosystems developed with birds as the only large grazers, the flora had developed in ways not seen anywhere else, leaving only limited plant foods available for humans. This must have made New Zealand not only a challenging but also an initially incomprehensible land for newly arrived Polynesians as well as Europeans. This fact makes their success in forging cultural landscapes from the new land all the more interesting for students of environmental history. As an example of such processes, New Zealand illustrates the way human newcomers learn to master an environment, change the land and its resources, and in the process change themselves. From the ‘fragile plenty’ of the first Māori to the cultural landscapes in which they lived at the time of the first European discovery, to the settler economy and the modern society of today, New Zealand is an example of the way a society develops on the basis of natural resources which change as the society itself changes. Newcomers to any environment meet it with a set of technologies and a culture which they bring with them and which changes continuously, as it aligns with experience gathered in that environment. The environmental histories told from a multiplicity of viewpoints in this volume are contributions to our understanding of this central dialectical relationship, which over time led to the creation of the landscapes and ecosystems of contemporary New Zealand. This chapter picks up on a theme which has been touched on in most of the preceding chapters, but which has not been fully unfolded. It argues that while conditions and events changed the relationship between society and environments repeatedly, the history of New Zealand was always a history of spaces and of the ability of its inhabitants to control space and resources cognitively, socially and physically. With this perspective in mind the chapter outlines the history of production of spatial knowledge about the environments of New Zealand. This is not only to provide an overview of understandings of the environment, but also to investigate and illustrate the close ties between knowledge and practice: between understanding the environment and changing it.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - Anthropology of the moderns

KW - metrology

KW - New Zealand

KW - Cartography

KW - Historical geography

KW - Faculty of Science

KW - Land use changes

KW - land use patterns

KW - Land use systems

KW - Landscape

KW - Landscape management

KW - Environmental management

KW - Environmental Monitoring

KW - Environmental history

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Representation

KW - Territory

KW - Spatial competence

KW - Territorial competence

KW - State formation

U2 - 10.13140/2.1.2825.3764

DO - 10.13140/2.1.2825.3764

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 978-1-877578-52-6

SP - 310

EP - 327

BT - Making a new land

A2 - Pawson, Eric

A2 - Brooking, Tom

PB - University of Otago Press

ER -

ID: 45813782