We have, so far, created an extensive dataset based on archaeological excavations and data from our 7 case study areas; a supplementary dataset based on all palynological data from our 7 case study areas and a dataset of heathland-indicating macrofossils from Denmark. We have carried out literature-based reviews on heathland research spanning archaeology and paleoecology, resilience research as well as historical documentations of heathland living. We have carried out a trench-excavation and paleoecological sampling of a Bronze Age barrow in NW Jutland. We have carried out supplementary peat and barrow corings from Mid-West Jutland, and collected samples for micromorphology, pollen/NPPs, macrofossils and parasites from other archaeological contexts, including barrows, funerary and settlement sites.
We have documented the temporal dimensions of the earliest heathland expansion and carried out a series of mappings of heathland emergence and resilience across Northern Europe as well as phenomenological approaches to heathland landscapes. We have shown that this particular kind of anthropogenic landscape emerged and became meaningful landscapes by being tied to pastoral and cosmological practices from its very onset. And we have put these processes into a wider geographical and historical perspective by looking into how the antidote of heathlands, the expansion of boundaries and fences, give rise to the collapse of deep time pastoral ecologies and forms of governance as well as new spatial conceptions.
We have critically engaged with a set of prevalent concepts and debates in archaeology, including resilience-thinking, topological comparison, and the more-than-human.
Our main results achieved so far have been published in 18 papers, and a series of other more public and dissemination-oriented publications.