Ms Paidamoyo Chingono
- Marie Sklodowska-Curie PhD Fellow - Changing Land Use over the Holocene: Southern Africa (Archaeology)
email:
Paidamoyo.Chingono@glasgow.ac.uk
pronouns:
She/her/hers
Biography
I am an environmental archaeologist with interests in landscape archaeology, Geographic Information Systems and Remote sensing applications in archaeology.
Geographic region: Dry lands of Southern Africa including Botswana, Namibia, South Africa, Zambia and Botswana.
Research Title: Changing land use over the Holoce: Southern Africa.
Changes in land use are recognised as primary drivers of biodiversity loss and climate change, making it crucial to study how land use has evolved. While early discussions on climate change centred on the impacts of industrialisation, there's growing acknowledgement that even earlier changes in land use patterns had considerable impacts on global climate systems. Recent research shows that the expansion of agriculture in prehistoric times, long before the Industrial Revolution, significantly contributed to greenhouse gas emissions and changes in global climate dynamics. Studying past land-use systems is therefore important in addressing modern global challenges, including food insecurity and climate adaptation
My project conducts a regional analysis of land use systems across southern Africa's dry regions from 10000 BCE to 1500 CE, combining archaeological data, expert knowledge with computational modeling. I will synthesize existing archaeological and environmental datasets to systematically quantify landscape transformations initiated by early land use practices in the region. By reconstructing ancient dryland agricultural practices, my research provides empirical insights into long-term human-environment interactions, resilience strategies, and the ecological consequences of early anthropogenic activities. Results will inform the AGRI-DRY initiative's objectives to integrate indigenous ecological knowledge with contemporary climate resilience strategies for dryland ecosystems.
Grants
Dryland agriculture and Land use; past, present and future resilience [AGRI-DRY]
This project is funded by the European Union’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Grant Agreement No 101120560 and supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [grant number EP/Y03290X/1].