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Lo-TEK: Underwater and intertidal nature-based technologies
Watson, J.; Linaraki, D.; Robertson, A. (2021). Lo-TEK: Underwater and intertidal nature-based technologies, in: Baumeister, J. et al. SeaCities: Urban Tactics for sea-level rise. Cities Research Series, : pp. 59-105. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-8748-1_4
In: Baumeister, J.; Bertone, E.; Burton, P. (Ed.) (2021). SeaCities: Urban tactics for sea-level rise. Cities Research Series. Springer Nature: Singapore. ISBN 978-981-15-8747-4; e-ISBN 978-981-15-8748-1. XVII, 304 pp. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-8748-1, more
In: Cities Research Series. Springer Nature: Singapore. ISSN 2662-4842; e-ISSN 2662-4850, more

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Keyword
    Marine/Coastal

Authors  Top 
  • Watson, J.
  • Linaraki, D.
  • Robertson, A.

Abstract
    This chapter considers the underwater and intertidal nature-based technologies of indigenous cultures and explores their innovations as solutions for the impacts of climate change to low-lying coastal areas. Indigenous people have been living with and developing water-responsive infrastructures for generations that engage and support the complex ecosystems they inhabit. Rooted in traditional ecological knowledge, or TEK, these technologies work symbiotically with, rather than against nature, ushering in a more comprehensive approach to underwater and intertidal design. Indigenous peoples’ responses to sea level rise and storm events improve coastal resiliency, yet remain undocumented and unexplored in the evolution of contemporary solutions. This chapter places these technologies in the modern scientific framework, cross-referencing indigenous people’s local nature-based technologies using the five sea level rise response strategies outlined in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s 2019 Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate: protect, accommodate, retreat, advance, and ecosystem-based adaptation. Reframed through an architectural and scientific rather than anthropological lens, the challenges cultures were facing and the resources that were available to them are explored to inform us in designing for global climate resiliency today.

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