The PANTROPOCENE project began by producing a novel evaluation and critical review of past human interactions with plants, animals, and landscapes in the Philippines over the last 6,000 years, spanning pre-colonial trade centres through the arrival of Spanish colonialism. This output, published in the journal Holocene and now part of standard student curricula in the Philippines, provided the framework for the collection of new data for the project.
The PANTROPOCENE project undertook the first globe-spanning archival work relating to land use in the Philippines, Mexico, Spain and the USA, leading to a series of novel publications that explored crop preferences in the colonial period (International Journal of Historical Archaeology) and crop productivity, land area, output, and exports across the Philippines through time (Humanities and Social Sciences Communications). The project obtained new palaeoecological records, and proxy data from these records, from five different locations in the Philippine Archipelago, increasing available records for the past 2,000 years three-fold. In addition to the first pan-tropical assessment of human forest impacts during the colonial period published by the project team in Nature Ecology and Evolution, these novel records are being prepared for publication.
The project was also able to produce the first high-resolution LiDAR images of pre-colonial and colonial land use in different parts of the Philippines over the course of two field seasons. The PANTROPOCENE project also funded novel archaeological investigations, undertaken by local partners of the University of the Philippines, that are expanding insights into colonial history and have supported/are supporting the production of four different Masters theses of students in the Philippines. This work has underpinned training of students from the Philippines in different archaeological science methodologies (some of whom are continuing work in PhD programmes) and provides a key platform for a diversity of new projects in different parts of the Philippines moving forward.
PANTROPOCENE converted these novel primary archaeological, historical, and palaeoecological datasets into robust, bottom-up spatial estimations of land use for four different time periods in Philippines history. The novel framework developed was published in an Open Access article in Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, with a focus on modelling the environmental impacts of the famous UNESCO Ifugao rice terraces. The project has also now produced the first land use categorisation and models for the entire Philippines for the four identified time periods, which are being prepared for publication. These land use models made scientific and technical advances and were discussed and co-produced with local scholars at a workshop in Manila in 2023. Finally, PANTROPOCENE has worked on developing workflows to incorporate such archaeological and historical land use, and land cover, datasets into Earth System models. Further publications produced by the project have already demonstrated how even broad historical, archaeological, and ethnographic insights can provide new, quantitative insights into the carbon (Plants, People, Planet) and fire risk (Journal of Urban Archaeology) consequences of past human activities, relevant for today.
Beyond its major scientific achievements PANTROPOCENE has also achieved major goals in the context of outreach. The PI wrote the popular book ‘Jungle: How Tropical Forests Shaped the World and Us’ (
https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/320595/jungle-by-roberts-patrick/9780241990780(se abrirá en una nueva ventana)). First, published in 2021 in the UK, and translated into multiple languages, the book represents a truly inter-disciplinary approach to tropical forests in the Earth’s history and highlights the significance of these ecosystems, and human interactions with them, in the public realm. PANTROPOCENE has also developed close connections with the Philippines heritage charity Tuklas and is working with local museums. The project website has also expanded to become the ‘Pantropica’ network for researchers working across the project, hosting podcasts and blogs from Early Career Researchers from around the tropics.