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Archaeological approaches to plastics and plastic pollution: A critical overview

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2024

Estelle Praet*
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, The King’s Manor, University of York, York, UK Department of Scientific Research, The British Museum, Great Russel Street, London, UK
John Schofield
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, The King’s Manor, University of York, York, UK
Raveena M. Tamoria
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, The King’s Manor, University of York, York, UK
*
Corresponding author: Estelle Praet; Email: [email protected]
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Abstract

In this overview, we examine some of the ways in which archaeologists have increasingly turned their attention to the contemporary world, focusing not on ancient artefacts but on the material legacies that we ourselves are creating and what they tell us about ourselves, including the impact we are having on planetary and human health. One aspect of this “contemporary archaeology” is the study of modern waste, an area of research often referred to as “garbology.” Originating in the later 1960s, this study of modern waste is typically focused on the plastics that characterise what is now commonly referred to as the Plastic Age, a supposedly more familiar past aligning with both cultural experience and memory. The paper emphasises archaeology’s strong interdisciplinary traditions, particularly in its use of scientific methods, which make it easier for archaeologists to work within interdisciplinary teams and with other stakeholders and with policymakers, these being particularly relevant in studies that focus on the contemporary world. The paper concludes by describing how archaeologists are using these perspectives on the contemporary world to cast their eyes forward to the future.

Type
Perspective
Creative Commons
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Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press

Impact statement

Archaeologists are used to generating impact, whether through the significance of new data from excavations impacting policy or public perceptions of climate change, or creating well-being benefits related to the cultural participation opportunities that archaeology typically entails. For archaeologies of the contemporary world, and notably for those archaeologists working with plastics, those impacts are proving to be equally, if not more evident. Taking an archaeological perspective on plastic items, investigating them as artefacts, can create meaningful object itineraries that help understand the journeys plastics have taken from source to sink and how human behaviours have shaped and influenced these journeys. Archaeology’s deep-time perspective contributes to new insight into heritage futures and the likely legacies of this toxic heritage on planetary and human health. Landscape archaeology takes a broader view on impacts, along coastlines for example, documenting how plastics can compromise visual integrity as well as the impact on, for example, Indigenous communities who inhabit these areas. In a more conventional sense, plastic items can also act as chronological markers, for example as techno fossils within stratigraphic sequences, markers to phases across a Plastic Age whose future trajectory is far from certain but which archaeology can help to predict.

Introduction

Archaeology is no longer just about looking at the stuff of the past – the traditional view that you were an archaeologist only if you did archaeology by digging the earth (Flannery, Reference Flannery1982; Shanks and McGuire, Reference Shanks and McGuire1996). Archaeology also has the capacity to offer important insights to understand, contextualise and solve current global challenges from migration to environmental change (Huvila et al., Reference Huvila2022). It is the discipline of resilient things, of stuff that remains, which reflects an important affinity with this “new” era – that some refer to as the Anthropocene (Pétursdóttir, Reference Pétursdóttir2017), and within it, the Plastic Age. Climate change to which plastics’ life cycle contributes (Ford et al., Reference Ford, Jones, Davies, Godley, Jambeck, Napper, Suckling, Williams, Woodall and Koldewey2022) has become the biggest challenge facing our planet. Plastic litter accumulates in the oceans and on beaches, becoming one of our most significant archaeological legacies (Holtorf, Reference Holtorf2024) and undoubtedly the most impactful contemporary material culture deposited in the archaeological records of this Plastic Age.

Characterised as a “wicked problem” (after Rittel and Webber, Reference Rittel and Webber1973; see Schofield, Reference Schofield2024 for its application through archaeology and cultural heritage) with expectations to double within the next 20 years (Lebreton and Andrady, Reference Lebreton and Andrady2019), plastic pollution poses serious and unprecedented threats to human health and environmental security. This paper provides an illustration of the broad range of theories, methods and tools that archaeology offers in studying plastics and plastic pollution. Archaeologists and heritage practitioners are uniquely poised to enrich plastic pollution discourse by contributing evidence-based knowledge gained via archaeological research and investigation, thus providing valuable contributions and perspectives. While Zimmerman’s research looks at archaeology of homelessness, his assertion is also appropriate to plastic pollution – that archaeology’s applicability to the present stems from three key elements: studying material culture, building accurate narratives about the past based on what is found and using the narratives to suggest changes relating to social concerns (Zimmerman, Reference Zimmerman2013). Similarly, Praet (Reference Praet2024) outlines several ways archaeologists approach plastics, either as cultural artefacts, studying their journeys from production to waste or examining them through the lens of how plastics affect diverse landscapes and create new geographies. Equally, Wooten (Reference Wooten2023) argues that historical archaeology provides a potential methodology to collect modern environmental data that contributes to meaningful solutions to the global climate crisis. All these methods provide the necessary and substantial scientific output required for effective and well-rounded policy-making and governance.

Archaeologies of the contemporary world

The contemporary world and the material traces that characterise it became topics of interest within archaeology in the late 1960s. The motivation with this early work was initially to study modern material culture among contemporary hunter–gatherer communities as a means to better understand the human behaviours of Palaeolithic peoples (e.g. Binford, Reference Binford1978; see also Yellen, Reference Yellen1977). These studies led to the first publications to discuss the merits and the theoretical foundations of a more contemporary archaeology (e.g. Rathje, Reference Rathje and Schiffer1979), being the study of modern material culture for what it tells us, specifically, about the contemporary world: the archaeology of us (Gould and Schiffer, Reference Gould and Schiffer1981). This emphasis on archaeology as an approach to investigating the contemporary world then developed further after 2000, to match the reflective mood of the new millennium (e.g. Graves-Brown, Reference Graves-Brown2000; Buchli and Lucas, Reference Buchli and Lucas2001a). All of these developments are summarised in Harrison and Schofield’s (Reference Harrison and Schofield2010) overview, which describes how these approaches share an interest for the complexities of a globalised, overwhelming and challenging material culture and how this material culture both shapes and characterises the world.

As described, and building on earlier work, archaeologists started to formally consider the “contemporary past” as an object of study in its own right in the early 2000s. The potential of modern material culture as a source of information and an archaeological object of interest was notably explored in “Matter, Materiality and Modern Culture” (Graves-Brown, Reference Graves-Brown2000). Several volumes followed, emphasising the contribution of contemporary archaeology. For example, as a discipline that contributes to building memory and resilience through ethical means (Archaeologies of the contemporary past” by Buchli and Lucas, Reference Buchli and Lucas2001a) and contemporary archaeologies as a diversity of practices acting as a way to “marry archaeology in the modern world and archaeology of the modern world” (Holtorf and Piccini Reference Holtorf and Piccini2009: 16). In a sense, these publications and the projects whose descriptions they contain were building on the awareness that archaeology is situated and political (Gonzalez-Ruibal, Reference González-Ruibal2008) and advocated for its relevance in contemporary context. In After Modernity (Reference Harrison and Schofield2010), Harrison and Schofield defined an archaeology of the contemporary past corresponding to the Late Modern period that distinguishes itself by increased communicative technologies and electronic media, a globalised technology impacting production and consumption, mass migration, new modes of capitalism and more leisure time. Reflecting on the challenges of an archaeology of and in the present, and the need for multidisciplinary perspectives, Graves-Brown et al. (Reference Graves-Brown, Harrison and Piccini2013) preferred to use “archaeology of the contemporary world” while recognising its relevance for the world’s future. A recurrent theme in archaeologies of the contemporary past is their ubiquity and inclusivity. Never had any field of archaeology tried so hard to broaden the discipline by including more specialists, reiterating that “we are all archaeologists now” because we all have something to say about our contemporary and (allegedly familiar) material culture (Harrison and Schofield, Reference Harrison and Schofield2010; Holtorf, Reference Holtorf2015: 217).

Several academic traditions have contributed to providing a different perspective on contemporary archaeologies. While contemporary archaeology is seen as an extension of historical archaeology in North America and Australia, for example, the Latin American perspective has emphasised the discipline’s importance for recovery notably after disaster and conflict (González-Ruibal, Reference González-Ruibal2018). The British/Nordic tradition has focused on the concepts of landscapes and esthetics, using surveys more than excavations while objects and their histories were key to the mainland European perspective (González-Ruibal, Reference González-Ruibal2018). Looking at the recent past has also allowed more collaborative approaches in archaeology and heritage management, notably in Australia with the involvement of Indigenous peoples defining their relationship with their surrounding heritage and environment whether recent or not (e.g. Ross et al., Reference Ross2010; Brady, Reference Brady2016; Jackson, Reference Jackson2023).

In brief, the last two decades have contributed to refining this new field of study and distinguishing it from ethnoarchaeology, archaeological ethnography, and historical archaeology despite the thematic and methodological overlaps between those disciplines (see Harrison and Breithoff, Reference Harrison and Breithoff2017 for a thorough discussion of these areas of overlap). An annual conference was established in 2003, Contemporary and Historical Archaeology in Theory, or CHAT, resulting in numerous edited conference proceedings (e.g. McAtackney et al., Reference McAtackney, Palus and Piccini2007), while a dedicated journal (the Journal of Contemporary Archaeology) launched in 2013. Yet, the discipline has faced critique, sometimes described as not being proper archaeology. Its detractors worry about the limited or absent time-depth of the research focus, an argument often used to criticise historical archaeology compared to the universally valued archaeological research of a remote and exotic past (Gilardenghi, Reference Gilardenghi2021). These critiques emerge from a consideration of the discipline of archaeology as excavation-based, failing to realise also the archaeological significance of the “surface assemblage” (Harrison, Reference Harrison2011). In this work, we use contemporary archaeologies as a framework building both on the creativity and diversity of their applications, their ability to foster interdisciplinary approaches and their relevance for current and future challenges notably that of plastic pollution. But before considering the issue of plastic pollution, we provide an overview of the intersections that exist involving archaeology and modern material culture.

Archaeology and modern material culture

Material culture (i.e. things and objects that humans and non-humans interact withFootnote 1) has always been central to the study of archaeology. While archaeologists have always worked with artefacts, the Material-Culture turn (i.e. the shift to materials occurring in the 1980s in British archaeology and anthropology following a revival of interest for materials across different disciplines, as detailed by Hicks, Reference Hicks, Hicks and Beaudry2010) opened the potential of material culture for other, and notably social scientists (Schiffer, Reference Schiffer2017: Chapter 29). However, in spite of their central position within archaeology, the role and importance of material culture have shifted over time, from providing ways to identify cultural groups (for Culture Historians) to becoming a source of information about people’s behaviours, even including contemporary material culture.

Processual archaeologists were the first to consider contemporary material culture as being of interest to answering archaeological questions. Following and contrasting the approach of Culture Historians associating shifts in artefact typology and style with cultural changes (e.g. the Neolithic “revolution” proposed by Childe, Reference Childe1935), processual archaeology developed an interest in cultural processes through the extensive use of models and systems thinking (e.g. Binford, Reference Binford1962, Reference Binford1965). Processual archaeology also explored contemporary ethnographic examples as a way to infer past practices and behaviours (Renfrew Reference Renfrew2011: Chapter 12). This interest in ethno-archaeology was fully explored in the study of Millie’s Camp (Canada) as an archaeological site. In this study, Bonnichsen (Reference Bonnichsen1973) analysed a contemporary camp from an archaeological perspective and inferred behaviours and practices from the material record, following its abandonment. The conclusions were then tested against information shared by Millie, a former camp occupant (Bonnichsen, Reference Bonnichsen1973). Taking a case study from the recent past, this study allowed archaeologists to test inferences and biases existing in archaeological interpretations.

Building on processual archaeology, behavioural archaeology focused on the relationship between material culture and human behaviours (Schiffer, Reference Schiffer2002, Reference Schiffer2010), including modes of inferring about past/present practices through past/present material culture (Reid et al., Reference Reid, Schiffer and Rathje1975). Through different strategies (Reid et al., Reference Reid, Schiffer and Rathje1975), behavioural archaeology mostly explored past and modern material culture as a source of information about people. Several projects were developed in the late 1960s and 1970s that combined those methods to investigate modern material culture, the most emblematic of which was the Garbage Project developed by William Rathje.

This project regarded modern garbage as a source of interest for archaeologists and a way to acquire information about the consumption patterns of contemporary society. Rathje contributed to the development of Garbology, a term introduced and put into practice by the journalist A.J. Weberman (Reference Weberman1980), who analyzed garbage from his idol Bob Dylan and then from various other famous individuals. Rathje’s Garbage Project developed this idea, promoting the scientific and systematic application of archaeological methods, such as surveys and typologies, to study contemporary waste (e.g. and notably Rathje and Murphy, Reference Rathje and Murphy2001). In the US, between 1973 and 2005, the Garbage Project analysed 192.2 tons of garbage from 20,416 households in seven areas, 45.3 tons of refuse from 19 landfills, and four open dumps in 15 cities (Rathje, Reference Rathje2011). Through their research, Rathje’s teams noted paper as being the most voluminous category within landfills, realizing however the significance of plastics whose proportions changed little between fresh household garbage and landfill due to their non-biodegradability despite advertised promises. This contemporary archaeology project therefore produced new information around consumption levels, food waste and reactions to shortages (Reno, Reference Reno, Graves-Brown, Harrison and Piccini2013). The Garbage Project emerged in an era concerned with social and environmental issues (Reno, Reference Reno, Graves-Brown, Harrison and Piccini2013), which makes it still very relevant today. The legacy of the project is still visible with several approaches using waste as a method to understand social practices (Högberg, Reference Högberg, Sosna and Brunclíková2017), reconstruct narratives of illegal migrations (De León, Reference De León2015), and of object journeys (Schofield et al., Reference Schofield2020), and as an engagement tool in marketing research (Damron-Martinez and Jackson, Reference Damron-Martinez and Jackson2017).

In the mid-1980s, post-processualism brought the focus on the meaning and symbolism of material culture and how this shaped human social practices (Trigger, Reference Trigger2006: Chapter 8; for a review on the development of post-processualism see Preucel, Reference Preucel1995). Post processualists looked at material culture per se and not as an interpretative tool (see Hicks, Reference Hicks, Hicks and Beaudry2010), recognising the agency of objects (Jones and Boivin, Reference Jones, Boivin, Hicks and Beaudry2010). From that perspective, post-processualists in the UK started to use contemporary material culture to reflect on social meaning and values. Research on the design of beer cans in Sweden versus Britain (Shanks and Tilley, Reference Shanks and Tilley1992) and the wearing of bow ties in a pet food factory (Hodder, Reference Hodder1987) led to the understanding of modern material culture within social practices (summarised in Harrison and Schofield, Reference Harrison and Schofield2010: 187–188). This approach slowly expanded the potential meaning and relevance of modern material culture while recognising its complexity. The use of material culture as a prism into culture, behaviour or society, had reached its limits, often reproducing an object–subject dualism, with the object informing about different aspects of the subject’s life. Several frameworks were since proposed to study material culture, questioning researchers positionality thanks to indigenous and feminist archaeologies (Hicks, Reference Hicks, Hicks and Beaudry2010), developing object-centred approaches (e.g. Olsen, Reference Olsen2010), investigating object agency (Gosden, Reference Gosden2005), and recognising how objects are entangled in relationships with different actors through Actor Network Theory (ANT) (Latour, Reference Latour1996, Reference Latour2005). Building on archaeological reflections on posthumanism (de-centering of the human, see Fernández-Götz et al., Reference Fernández-Götz2021) and New Materialisms (a recognition that materials are central for archaeologists but considering them in a non-reductionist manner, see Witmore, Reference Witmore2014: 205), archaeologists considered ways to apply these frameworks to the archaeological record (e.g. Fowler and Harris, Reference Fowler and Harris2015) including of the contemporary era (e.g. Yaneva, Reference Yaneva, Graves-Brown, Harrison and Piccini2013).

Those expanding perspectives were facilitated by the consideration for modern and contemporary material culture, particularly in anthropology and sociology (e.g. Hawkins et al., Reference Hawkins, Potter and Race2015 for an analysis of bottled water), but also in archaeology (Erny and Caraher, Reference Erny and Caraher2020; Letelier Cosmelli and Goldschmidt Levinsky, Reference Letelier Cosmelli and Goldschmidt Levinsky2021). From that perspective, much of modern material culture became archaeological objects of research and even archaeological sites including a Ford Transit van (Bailey et al., Reference Bailey2009), a computer hard drive (Perry and Morgan, Reference Perry and Morgan2015), and video games (Newell et al., Reference Newell, Aycock and Biittner2022). Among those studies, some focused on new synthetic materials, such as plastics (e.g. in the form of leisure items such as vinyl records and toys), and offered avenues to explore different concepts, such as that of nature/culture as a holistic framework for investigation, extending beyond the conventional dualism, and to recognise the actions of both human and nonhuman actors. The entanglement of plastics with humans and non-humans alike, and its contribution to new geological forms make these distinctions even less relevant for contemporary assemblages. The focus on modern material culture therefore inscribes itself in those approaches, opening interpretations beyond an anthropocentric and western lens. This focus on modern material culture developed alongside an interest for modern societies in their integrity that naturally became a topic of interest for (contemporary) archaeologists. The specificity of modern material culture entangled in global, colonial, and complex networks requires tailored archaeological frameworks to explore how they contribute to shaping our societies culturally, socially, politically, and economically. In this paper, we emphasise the framework of object itineraries that we consider particularly helpful to understand plastics as global artefacts (see for example, the global journey of a flip flop by Knowles, Reference Knowles2015). The following section will present how object itineraries are particularly suited for the study of plastics as artefacts characteristic of the Plastic Age.

Object itineraries

The interest in artefacts, and their complex histories, led to the development of the chaîne opératoire due to the theories of anthropologist Marcel Mauss (Reference Mauss1936) and the contributions of archaeologist Leroi-Gourhan (Reference Leroi-Gourhan1964) to account for the sequence of actions necessary for an artefact’s production. (see Lewis and Arntz, Reference Lewis and Arntz2020 for a review of the term’s genesis, present uses and potential developments). This concept offered a very systematic way of reconstructing the different steps included in the making of an object. It offered possibilities to inform on the technology of societies (Martinón-Torres, Reference Martinón-Torres2002) and was first predominantly used by French academics for lithics studies (Sellet, Reference Sellet1993). The chaîne opératoire mostly focused on objects by reconstructing production steps, starting with the procurement of raw material and ending with the discard of the artefact (Sellet, Reference Sellet1993). However, the framework and its focus on technology were deemed too rigid to understand other aspects of artefact production (Bar-Yosef and Van Peer, Reference Bar-Yosef and Van Peer2009), which were central to the development of alternatives inferring behaviours from the material record. For example, Schiffer (Reference Schiffer1975) developed the behavioural chain analysis, considered in some ways very similar to the chaîne opératoire (Sellet, Reference Sellet1993; Martinón-Torres, Reference Martinón-Torres2002; Lewis and Arntz, Reference Haram2020), aiming to reconstruct a sequence of activities and testing how these correspond to the archaeological record. In his development of behavioural archaeology, Schiffer (Reference Schiffer2002, Reference Schiffer2010) was interested in cultural and noncultural processes, including taphonomic factors, to reconstruct materials’ life histories and understand the record the archaeologists are faced with (Schiffer, Reference Schiffer1975). Both the chaîne opératoire and the behavioural chain analysis have since informed studies using the chaîne opératoire to reconstruct with more precision the steps of artefact production, use, and discard for a wide range of materials (e.g. Driscoll, Reference Driscoll2009; Drieu et al., Reference Drieu, Lepère and Regert2020). Since then, the concept has evolved to be more inclusive of social practices and its reconstruction has built upon multidisciplinary works, facilitated by the rise in material science studies (Lewis and Arntz, Reference Haram2020). While the social and cultural aspects of material culture are therefore considered in more recent applications of the chaîne opératoire (Lewis and Arntz, Reference Haram2020), it was their absence that led archaeologists, particularly post-processualists, to look for approaches focusing on the social life of objects such as object biography and life histories.

The consideration for the sociality of material culture naturally led archaeologists to focus on how the social nature of objects was expressed through interactions with humans and how their lives paralleled our own. Two concepts were developed building on an analogy with human life: object biographies and life histories. First coined by the anthropologist Kopytoff (Reference Kopytoff and Appadurai1986), object biographies were seen as a way to ask the same questions about objects (or, as he called them, things) and people, including their origin, cultural meaning, and the changes throughout their lives. A thing could have multiple biographies whether social, economic, or technical but all would be culturally constituted (Kopytoff, Reference Kopytoff and Appadurai1986). The potential of the framework was then explored for archaeological artefacts in Gosden and Marshall’s (Reference Gosden and Marshall1999) landmark publication. These authors considered object biographies as an accumulation of histories and relationships with people crystallising in the present significance of the objects. Biographies facilitated the consideration of shifting and changing meanings and perceptions during the life of an artefact (Hahn and Weiss, Reference Hahn, Weiss, Hahn and Weiss2013). Life histories, already considered as a part of behavioural archaeology (Schiffer, Reference Schiffer1975), aimed at understanding and reconstructing the trajectory that artefacts had taken, adopting a social (e.g. Holtorf, Reference Holtorf1998; Crown, Reference Crown2007) or technological lens (e.g. Sáenz-Samper and Martinón-Torres, Reference Sáenz-Samper and Martinón-Torres2017; Plaza Calonge et al., Reference Plaza Calonge, Figueroa Larre and Martinón-Torres2022). While the focus on morphological and/or functional changes had been central to use-life approaches developed by processualists (Tringham, Reference Tringham, Benjamin and Stea1995), life histories also considered the social interactions in which objects and monuments were and still are entangled (e.g. Holtorf, Reference Holtorf1998), and the meaning they hold (Gosden and Marshall, Reference Gosden and Marshall1999). The concept allowed for an object’s life to be told independently from its maker(s) or owner(s), a vision particularly helpful when multiple hands contribute to the existence of clay pots (Crown, Reference Crown2007) and to consider the role of past monuments for subsequent societies (Holtorf, Reference Holtorf1998).

Limitations of both concepts were quickly identified, and scholars attempted to clarify both frameworks to make them more nuanced. Despite the success of object biographies for almost 25 years in archaeology (Mytum, 2003/Reference Mytum2004; Pearson and Connah, Reference Pearson and Connah2013; Jones et al., Reference Jones, Díaz-Guardamino and Crellin2016; Guzzo Falci et al., Reference Guzzo Falci2020), concerns regarding its limitations were also raised. For example, limitations of object biographies include the ontology (dualism subject/object), the linearity of the reconstructed biography and the start and end point of an object’s life (see Hahn and Weiss, Reference Hahn, Weiss, Hahn and Weiss2013; Bauer, Reference Bauer2019). The risks posed by the linear nature of object biographies was already identified by Joy (Reference Joy2009), who advocated for a relational biography focusing on the set of relationships an object was entangled in. Scholars using life histories identified similar issues, particularly the determination of start (birth) and end (death) points (see Holtorf, Reference Holtorf1998 for the death of megalithic monuments). To acknowledge this, Holtorf (Reference Holtorf2002) distinguished between short and long life histories, the former including an object’s life until it is buried, whereas the latter extends to include interactions that led the object to reach the present time. The development of the long life histories framework enabled Holtorf (Reference Holtorf2002) to situate material culture in the present while recognising its extension into the past and the future and evaluate the evolution of its meaning through time. Despite those attempts, the development of a new framework, object itineraries, allowed archaeologists to move away from the problematic analogy with human life at the core of object biographies and life histories.

First proposed by Rosemary Joyce (Reference Joyce and Shankland2012a, Reference Joyce, Geurds and Van Broekhoven2012b), object itineraries are defined as routes by which things circulate in and out of places where they come to rest or are active (Joyce, Reference Joyce, Joyce and Gillespie2015: 29). Central to the volume edited by Joyce and Gillespie (Reference Joyce and Gillespie2015a), the potential of object itineraries as an alternative to object biographies was explored for archaeological artefacts, fully considering the modalities of circulation of the objects. Going beyond the tension between relational and narrative biographies, itineraries connect objects to their representations (Joyce and Gillespie, Reference Joyce, Gillespie, Joyce and Gillespie2015b) and the engagement they have with researchers and with the public (Joyce, Reference Joyce, Joyce and Gillespie2015). Since then, the concept has gained interest in archaeology (e.g. Joyce, Reference Joyce2017) including examples from museum (e.g. McGill and St. Germain, Reference McGill and St Germain2021) and heritage studies (e.g. Bauer, Reference Bauer2021), creative writing (e.g. Nisbet, Reference Nisbet2021), and even marketing research (e.g. Santana and Botelho, Reference Santana and Botelho2019). The framework has been seen as having several advantages over object biographies (see Bauer, Reference Bauer2019), for example mapping out how the stops and journeys of an object can be interconnected (Nisbet, Reference Nisbet2021) and working on different temporal scales, from human life span to geology (Joyce, Reference Joyce, Joyce and Gillespie2015). Object itineraries also allow us to consider the ethical and political implications of material culture (Bauer, Reference Bauer2019). In that perspective, the potential of object itineraries is key to moving beyond the limitations that life histories and biographies could not overcome. Itineraries offer space to consider a network of processes and relationships that go beyond the temporal, human and geographical scales usually considered. For plastics, this is particularly important because of their persistence, plasticity, ubiquity, untraceability, and “globalised unlocality” (Davis, Reference Davis2022: 5). This framework suits plastics particularly well, breaking away from the technical focus of chaîne opératoire, the linearity of biographies, and the analogy with human life. This constitutes a framework that is well suited to the archaeological investigation of plastics as artefacts embodying the Plastic Age.

The Plastic Age

Like many categories of artefacts from earlier periods, plastics are abundant, ubiquitous, and pervasive within the contemporary world, and this has been increasingly the case since about 1950 when plastics started to become widely used, not least in food packaging. Yet, it is the persistence and the impact of their presence that separates plastics from other materials of earlier periods. Their ubiquity and the way they affect people unequally emphasise the colonial dynamics in which plastics are entangled, from production to disposal (Liboiron, Reference Liboiron2021; Davis, Reference Davis2022). By being global, colonial, political and persistent, they embody anthropic impacts on the environment, a key characteristic of the Anthropocene. While recently dismissed by the International Union of Geological Sciences (IUGS) as a geological epoch (Witze Reference Witze2024), the Anthropocene remains a relevant concept for scholars from a wide range of disciplines interested in exploring the distinct nature of human impact since the 1950s. While we recognise the key role that plastics played in defining and studying the Anthropocene (e.g. Zalasiewicz et al., Reference Zalasiewicz2016), we here prefer the term Plastic Age, as a more archaeologically oriented term.

The term Plastic Age, first mentioned as the title of an American novel written by Percy Marks in 1924, has become a term adopted by different scholars (Thompson et al., Reference Thompson2009; Porta, Reference Porta2021; Kramm and Völker, Reference Kramm and Völker2023), to mirror the periodisation of earlier periods such as the Stone Age, the Bronze Age and the Iron Age. Similarly to the Anthropocene, debates have arisen regarding the starting point of the Plastic Age. The invention of synthetic plastics in the early twentieth century, and their increasing importance served to suggest a starting date for the Plastic Age after the First World War (e.g. Sklar, Reference Sklar1970). Yet, the consumption of plastics increased drastically after the Second World War to meet the demands of post-war societies rushing into mass consumerism (Meikle, Reference Meikle1992; Strasser, Reference Strasser2000). This period also coincides with the diversification of plastics’ chemical signatures (Geyer, Reference Haram2020), hence making 1950 a most commonly accepted starting date for the Plastic Age, as stated above. A few variants were also proposed including the Plasticene (Ross, Reference Ross2018; Haram et al., Reference Haram2020), starting in 1907 (corresponding to the invention of Bakelite as the first fully synthetic plastic) with an intensification since 1950 (Rangel-Buitrago, Neal and Williams, Reference Rangel-Buitrago, Neal and Williams2022), and the Plastics Age (Sparke, 1993 in Hawkins, Reference Hawkins2018). Following the use of the singular for other periods, and as stated above, we here refer to the Plastic Age (as in Godin et al. Reference Godin, Pétursdóttir, Praet and Schofield2024) while recognising diversity within its scope. The Plastic Age emphasises the key role of plastics as material culture shaping practices of our contemporary societies, mirroring archaeological periods centred on the material properties and technology of artefacts (Graves-Brown, Reference Graves-Brown2014). Aside from being a material culture that most people interact with daily, plastics are becoming historical, entering museum collections subject to conservation treatments, and yet also forming a “toxic heritage” (after Kryder-Reid and May, Reference Kryder-Reid and May2024).

The history of synthetic plastics highlights how they have acquired socio-economic values and importance. In that sense, they have become what archaeologists consider artefacts, shaping new social practices (Hawkins, Reference Hawkins2018) and holding cultural meaning (Ingold, Reference Ingold2000). Emblematic of our contemporary world, plastics were praised and hated equally. In the first instance, plastics were seen as cheap substitutes for other materials (Bensaude-Vincent, Reference Bensaude-Vincent, Gabrys, Hawkins and Michael2013), offering a way to protect natural resources while paving the way for democratisation of several products. There followed a tangible excitement to explore the potential of plastics’ materiality in art and design, preceding an ecological consciousness of plastics’ impacts and persistence (Bryning, Reference Bryning, Godin, Pétursdóttir, Praet and Schofield2024). Plastics were also of interest to scholars studying modern material culture including archaeologists, notably as a symbol embodying consumer culture, supermodernity and destruction (in the sense defined by González-Ruibal, Reference González-Ruibal2018). For example, the plasticity of plastics, and their mutable qualities, created new socio-economic dynamics and markets (Hawkins et al., Reference Hawkins, Potter and Race2015; Dey, Reference Dey2021), but also reinforced and reproduced some immutabilities including exposure to waste (Dey, Reference Dey2021).

Plastic artefacts enter the archaeological record and can even become part of the geology. Corcoran et al. (Reference Corcoran, Moore and Jazvac2013) were the first to identify a hybrid artefact (in the sense given by Liebmann, Reference Liebmann2015) in Hawaii, which they called plastiglomerate. Since then, different ways in which plastic can be the locus of nature/culture hybridisation have been identified (see Rangel-Buitrago, Neal and Williams, Reference Rangel-Buitrago, Neal and Williams2022 for a review of the ways plastics are included in the geology). The “Plastic Geological Cycle” is a term proposed by Rangel-Buitrago, Neal and Williams (Reference Rangel-Buitrago, Neal and Williams2022) to explain the processes and pathways by which plastics, especially micro- and nano-particles, are incorporated into the Earth’s geosphere and potentially impact the natural rock cycle. The existence of anthrosols (i.e. a mix of litter with organic and/or mineral matter) and plastisols (i.e. plastic mixed with organic and/or mineral matter) (Rangel-Buitrago, Neal and Williams, Reference Rangel-Buitrago, Neal and Williams2022) highlight how plastics can also enter the archaeological record and indicate layers of occupation.

Archaeologies of plastics and plastic pollution

With the long-standing interest of archaeologists in the waste generated by human societies, plastic litter and pollution have become the focus of several studies. The accumulation of plastics was identified on the Iron Age heritage site of Castell Henllys (Wales) where the sites of two reconstructed Iron Age houses were excavated by Mytum and Meek (Reference Mytum and Meek2020). Plastics were considered as artefacts informing on the site’s visitors’ behaviours (Mytum and Meek, Reference Haram2020). Building on the potential of material culture to inform behaviours, an archaeological framework was used to correlate the accumulation of plastics in rivers with littering behaviours (Carpenter and Wolverton, Reference Carpenter and Wolverton2017). Taking a landscape approach, surveys of drift matter including plastics yielded insight into the human relationship to this material culture and how it is perceived locally (Pétursdóttir, Reference Pétursdóttir2017, Reference Pétursdóttir2020). Using plastic waste collected on beaches of Galapagos (Ecuador), Schofield et al. (Reference Schofield2020) organised a narrative workshop to reconstruct the journeys that those plastic artefacts had taken before reaching the archipelago’s shores. Sampling of plastic bags in the town of Santa Cruz, Galapagos was also undertaken to approach disposal practices over time (Schofield et al., Reference Schofield2021a). These latter two were related studies that provided the groundwork and the opportunity for further projects using marine plastic litter as the basis for online and in-person narrative workshops in Galapagos and the wider Pacific region (Praet et al., Reference Praet2023a; Praet et al., Reference Praet2023b). Prior to these projects, the potential of researching marine debris as an archaeological object of study was already identified by Arnshav (Reference Arnshav2014), who encouraged the development of marine garbology. Sometimes, access to physical artefacts is challenging as was the case during the COVID-19 lockdowns. From that perspective, social media representations and content analysis also offer an archive of plastic use and disposal, which can be investigated archaeologically, the artefacts in this case being represented through online records such as photographs or descriptions. Using evidence from social media, Schofield et al. (Reference Schofield2021b) studied Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) such as face masks and gloves from an archaeological perspective to develop policy recommendations. In their MetroVancouver project, Camp and Muckle (Reference Camp and Muckle2022) documented artwork, structures and artefacts associated with the pandemic through pedestrian surveys, digital recording and online meetings. These projects under the COVID-19 pandemic emphasise the relevance of contemporary archaeology to document waste associated with specific events and contribute to recommending solutions.

Archaeological approaches are not limited to plastic waste and can also include perspectives on plastic production sites (e.g. Caraher, Reference Caraher, Godin, Pétursdóttir, Praet and Schofield2024) and the use of plastics as products (e.g. in art see Bryning, Reference Bryning, Godin, Pétursdóttir, Praet and Schofield2024) sometimes reused as building material to maintain heritage building traditions (e.g. in the case of the Flipflopi, a dhow made of former plastic flip flops, see Müller et al., Reference Müller, Béguerie, Faber, Godin, Pétursdóttir, Praet and Schofield2024). Plastic production sites can become part of a toxic heritage, one facilitated by industrialisation and waste disposal, and that has shaped our current landscapes (e.g. Shackel, Reference Shackel, Kryder-Reid and May2023). The extraction of natural plastics can also contribute to the development of toxic landscapes, for example, with the addition of chemicals to process rubber in Amazonia (Alves Muniz, Reference Alves Muniz, Kryder-Reid and May2023). In addition, archaeological theory can approach plastic from different angles, questioning the role of the discipline in addressing this current environmental crisis. A recent reflection by Wooten (Reference Wooten2023) offered to focus on plastics archaeologically as a basis for activism and public outreach, leading to reflections on behaviour and the current climate crisis. This refreshing approach used archaeology as a situated practice, while Praet (Reference Praet2024) looked at plastic pollution as an object of study and of concern for archaeologists, respectively, exploring the potential of its materiality, suggesting different techniques and acknowledging its impacts on heritage and archaeological sites.

While there are many ways to consider an archaeology of plastics or plastic pollution as a subfield of contemporary archaeologies, transdisciplinary approaches are particularly welcome and are probably essential to approach the related wicked problems of climate change and environmental pollution (see Bernstein, Reference Bernstein2015). For example, some scholars have become interested in the accumulation of plastics over time in sedimentary records (Brandon et al., Reference Brandon, Jones and Ohman2019; Simon-Sánchez et al., Reference Simon-Sánchez2022), while others have explored the information available on plastic objects (Falk-Andersson et al., Reference Falk-Andersson2021), notably on PET bottles (Ryan, Reference Ryan2020; Ryan et al., Reference Ryan2021). Other studies have focused on plastic litter weathering and degradation, notably with the Lego Lost at Sea project (Turner et al., Reference Turner, Arnold and Williams2020). While a thorough discussion of ways to look at plastics archaeologically is provided by Praet (Reference Praet2024), the Routledge Handbook of Archaeology and Plastics (Godin et al., Reference Godin, Pétursdóttir, Praet and Schofield2024) is the first work exploring the diversity of archaeological approaches to plastics and plastic pollution globally, in both a geographic and thematic sense.

Plastic waste as toxic heritage

Waste is a ubiquitous material of post-industrial landscapes, one that is entangled in social, economic and/or political relationships (Baird, Reference Baird and Pettenati2022). Studying plastics archaeologically requires consideration of plastic waste and how it can become and/or threaten heritage. Considering plastics as heritage questions the value(s) contemporary societies assign to them as products but also as waste. While there is no doubt that some plastic products can be seen as highly valued heritage as they hold social, cultural and economic meaning, the discussion here focuses on plastic waste exclusively. In their socio-archaeological approach to the International Space Station (ISS), Walsh et al. (Reference Walsh, Gorman and Castaño2022) identified that waste could either be seen as: (a) not valuable and therefore burnt or (b) valued and therefore removed from the ISS and brought back to earth. The limited capacity of vessels going back to earth from the ISS required a careful selection of the objects, hence the need to focus only on those items given value and importance (Walsh et al., Reference Walsh, Gorman and Castaño2022). Inspired by forensic science, Walsh et al. (Reference Walsh, Gorman and Castaño2022) used the concept of chain of custody, considering the whole process of inventorying, handling, documenting and disposing of objects with accountable actors for every step. This specific example contrasts with the lack of accountability characterising most plastic waste, being considered untraceable (see Davis, Reference Davis2022). While accountability varies greatly for plastic waste, the value assigned to it is key to how contemporary societies perceive and act towards it.

Recent discussions have highlighted that plastic waste can also contribute to heritage making, either by being reused to maintain heritage practices or by shaping new waste landscapes valued for their extraordinary nature (see Godin et al., Reference Godin, Pétursdóttir, Praet and Schofield2024). The former can be exemplified by Müller et al. (Reference Müller, Béguerie, Faber, Godin, Pétursdóttir, Praet and Schofield2024) in their illustration of recycled plastic flip flops used as raw material to build a traditional boat with nontraditional material, using indigenous knowledge. From that perspective, plastic waste allows heritage-making to survive and indigenous knowledge to be passed on. Considering plastic waste as heritage is a position notably argued for by Holtorf (Reference Holtorf and Shepherd2023: 119) who considers that plastic trash “forms a kind of distributed World Heritage Site”. Plastic waste as a heritage site contrasts with its “globalized unlocality” (Davis, Reference Davis2022: 5), constant transformation and degradation, and the geographical scale of the issue.

With archaeological theory and practice being heavily influenced by posthumanism, nonhumans are now immersed within definitions of heritage. From that perspective, considering marine plastic litter and plastic waste in general as entangled in heritage making is meaningful, as it shapes new relationships with humans and nonhumans alike. Heritage can no longer be perceived as a restriction from the human touch (see Harrison, Reference Harrison, Bangstad and Pétursdóttir2021). Plastic’s overwhelming presence and degradation into fragments that become entangled with nature make it difficult and almost irrelevant to differentiate nature/culture in most places around the world. The concept of plastic naturecultures was proposed by De Wolff (Reference De Wolff2017) to address the specificities of plastic-species encounters and the plastisphere. Plastic nature cultures could then become a type of heritage, nonetheless recognising the threat that these interactions pose and the toxic nature of such heritage.

The threat that plastics pose to the environment, wildlife and human health turns it into an almost hazardous material or heritage. In that sense, plastic waste belongs to a category of heritage that has recently been gathered under the concept of toxic heritage (Kryder-Reid and May Reference Kryder-Reid and May2024). The toxicity of heritage is not related to its content but rather to its management and the narratives built on it (Wollentz et al., Reference Wollentz and Harrison2020). In that perspective, plastic can be considered toxic and toxic heritage more because of its (mis)management than the toxic additives and substances allowing its plasticity. Plastic is also very changeable, a property characterising toxic waste and toxic heritage, according to Wollentz et al. (Reference Wollentz and Harrison2020). Plastics have also been labelled ghost heritage (notably by Harrison, Reference Harrison, Bangstad and Pétursdóttir2021). The concept of ghost heritage, as haunting unmanaged disposals (Harrison, Reference Harrison, Bangstad and Pétursdóttir2021: 38), is an interesting way to approach plastics, particularly to explore the shifts of plastic pollution from an overwhelmingly visible issue on polluted beaches to the invisible ingestion of micro- and nano-plastics by humans and nonhumans. Depending on the beholder, the context and the degradation, plastics can be overwhelmingly visible, such as in Kamilo Beach, Hawaii, one of the most polluted beaches on earth, or invisible to most humans, such as plastics in deeply buried archaeological sediments (Rotchell et al. Reference Rotchell2024).

Considering plastic waste as heritage is also anchored in the legacy that it is leaving for future societies, one that already represents the Anthropocene and the Plastic Age. However considering plastic waste as legacy and heritage must be done cautiously. The danger in perceiving waste as heritage, even if toxic, also echoes worries about reifying waste and waste fetishism (see Gille, Reference Gille2010, Reference Gille2013). The legacy of plastic waste is also unequal, often following colonial dynamics imposed upon Indigenous peoples and lands (Liboiron, Reference Liboiron2021). Exports of plastic waste have reinforced those colonial dynamics with Global South communities exposed to the hazards that plastic waste provokes. From that perspective, an intersectional approach (after Crenshaw, Reference Crenshaw1991) helps understand how waste affects people unequally depending on gender, age, class, origin, occupation, and economic possibilities among others. Plastic may represent an important material for women waste pickers from marginalized communities in the Global South relying on this work (Wittmer, Reference Wittmer2021) while women from WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialised, Rich and Democratic) societies have economic possibilities, allowing them to avoid plastics in their eco-friendly lifestyle.

Independently from the unequal distribution of its legacy, waste remains relational and connected (Baird, Reference Baird and Pettenati2022), which makes the use of object itineraries particularly relevant to discuss plastic waste. Baird (Reference Baird and Pettenati2022) even proposes to see waste as a teaching tool, one that moves our consideration of waste from nostalgia to repair by considering the social, economic, and environmental problems at its core. Projects based on plastic waste as artefacts can inspire discussions about respect for the environment and the role of human behaviour contributing to the issue (e.g. Holtorf, Reference Holtorf and Shepherd2023 for his analysis of the Lego Lost at Sea project). Contemporary archaeology is interested not only in the material culture of us, and here, we are focusing on plastics, but also in the activities, relationships, and perceptions we develop with and towards these objects. Using an archaeological framework turns archaeology into a situated and thus vital practice.

Plastics, archaeology and contributions to policy

As we discussed previously, archaeologists routinely now study the contemporary world with a view to the future, while archaeology has also become highly interdisciplinary and creative in the ways it attempts to build an understanding of the world, emphasising the relationships that humans have with their world including the things and the non-humans that they share it with. From that perspective, archaeology can contribute to shaping policy and evaluate decision-making, notably by contributing to activism and contextualising plastic pollution as a societal problem centered around material culture.

Archaeology can be viewed as an important tool for activism (see Wooten Reference Wooten2023) through the data and understandings that it can generate. Activist groups can shape governance initiatives, as well as pushing for policies and programs that are focused on solutions towards recycling, reuse, and reduction of waste (O’Neil, Reference O’Neill2019). As described earlier, there is a growing injustice and inequity stemming from plastic pollution, where some communities are taking on more of the burden of plastic pollution than others. Plastic pollution disproportionately harms the human right to a clean and healthy environment, and for many vulnerable communities including indigenous peoples and the many waste pickers who recycle and repurpose plastic waste, they are experiencing systemic environmental injustices (Vandenburg and Ota, Reference Vandenberg and Ota2022). Inequitable impacts of plastic pollution do not start in the ocean and can be observed at all stages of the plastic lifecycle, extending across social, political, and economic planes and are disproportionate, for example, for people of colour and low income (Vandenburg and Ota, Reference Vandenberg and Ota2022). This asymmetry of power over plastics production and pollution governance has excluded a diversity of actors across the full range of plastics and alternative forms of knowledge and world views (to dominant Eurocentric scientific disciplines), producing harmful outcomes for already at-risk communities (O’Neil, Reference O’Neill2019; Vandenburg and Ota, Reference Vandenberg and Ota2022). Contemporary archaeological work enables deeper consideration of inequalities and injustice in the past and functions to remind us of struggles that continue into the present day and the future (Kiddey and Graves-Brown, Reference Kiddey and Graves-Brown2015).

The plastic crisis is a complex societal problem and transcends all borders. Undoubtedly, problems related to plastic pollution cannot be solved solely by the waste management sector or changes through consumer choices and cannot be solved as quickly as we may hope. Given the scale and magnitude of climate change and other environmental challenges, researchers have emphasised the value of interdisciplinary or transdisciplinary research, including the social sciences and humanities, to evaluate issues and search for realistic scenarios and solutions (Rick and Sandweiss, Reference Rick and Sandweiss2020). Policymakers are required to analyse the problems, make decisions and implement changes (Detombe, Reference De Tombe2015). Archaeology in the context of interdisciplinary approaches will be key to finding overarching laws and policy solutions fitting the scope of the problem. The plastic pollution crisis is placing the planet in peril. Plastics contribute to climate change through greenhouse gas emissions, from production to disposal, and the pollution will be exacerbated by climatic events (Ford et al., Reference Ford, Jones, Davies, Godley, Jambeck, Napper, Suckling, Williams, Woodall and Koldewey2022). Archaeologists as members of a community of interdisciplinary researchers now have an important role to play because of their unique insight into understanding behaviours through material culture, their ability to work across scales (from local to global) and in all environments, and their deep-time perspective. Therefore, by conveying their findings in holistic and equitable applications of scientific, social, and economic perspectives to understand the Plastic Age and its related challenges, they can be a part of shaping important policies, regulations, and legislative frameworks at all levels.

Plastics: An archaeological view into the deep future

In this paper, we have discussed how, over the past 60 years, archaeology has transitioned from a study of only the ancient past to a dynamic and future-oriented study of the contemporary world, incorporating those ancient traces that have proved resilient and form a part of our world, alongside the traces that we ourselves are creating in our everyday actions. This transition has rendered archaeology not only socially relevant, in the sense that it is a record of our own contributions and impacts upon the world and how and why they matter, but as a subject central to future thinking and to better understanding the implications of our behaviours on the years, centuries, and millennia that lie ahead. Archaeology is, arguably, uniquely placed to explore, think about, and critically examine alternative futures. However, it is important also to restate a point made earlier: that archaeology has long been an interdisciplinary field of study, not only working with scientists and social scientists, to get more from the evidence recovered, but also working in a transdisciplinary way, to analyse public reaction, influence policy and demonstrate impact. What archaeological work on plastics has proven is that this collaborative approach is not optional but essential for archaeology to continue to have influence.

As people living in the early to mid twenty-first century, we can predict many alternative futures. Some of our views are shaped by science fiction, each story representing a time many centuries or even multiple millennia from now. Rather than fiction, perhaps we should consider these to be some of those “alternative futures”. As we continue to try to better understand the past, we can also use the archaeological evidence at our disposal, alongside models generated for example through economics and climate science, to directly and critically address those futures by determining which elements are the most likely to occur, what might cause them to occur or rule them out, and when we might expect them to become a reality. Finding solutions to the current wicked problems of climate change and environmental pollution is one area in which these two archaeological perspectives (past- and future-oriented) can converge. Taking archaeology into new and challenging situations like these, alongside new environments such as deep oceans and space, presents additional opportunities to think about human pasts, present and future.

But where we perhaps need to focus most of all is in demonstrating how our archaeological evidence can cause people to think about their own part in this grand narrative, about time and our place within the many stories of the changing planet on which we live and upon which we depend. Archaeology is ultimately about people and it is the individual actions of people that have created the traces that constitute the palimpsest of the contemporary world. How we act today, as a society but also as individuals within society, will similarly determine the shape of future worlds. This philosophical approach, this way of thinking, is something that, as archaeologists, we understand. Plastics, as archaeological materials, are central to reading, thinking through and ultimately, hopefully, understanding the implications of the deep entanglements of people and things in the contemporary world, and they are also therefore vital to how we might try to untangle things sufficiently to create futures in which life continues to thrive.

Open peer review

To view the open peer review materials for this article, please visit http://doi.org/10.1017/plc.2024.22.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank the editors for inviting them to contribute to Cambridge Prisms with this review evaluating the contribution of archaeology to the study of plastics and plastic pollution. An early version of this paper was written as the introduction to EP’s PhD thesis submitted to the University of York in January 2024. The authors would like to thank two anonymous reviewers for their comments and suggestions that contributed to improving this paper.

Author contribution statement

Estelle Praet: conceptualization; writing – original draft; writing – review and editing John Schofield: structure; writing – original draft; writing – review and editing Raveena M. Tamoria: writing – original draft; writing – review and editing.

Financial support

EP’s research, as part of her PhD, was supported by the Arts & Humanities Research Council [grant number AH/R012733/1] through the White Rose College of the Arts & Humanities.

Competing interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Footnotes

1 It is beyond the scope of this paper to offer a thorough review of material culture studies. There are several resources available to understand its development including Hicks and Beaudry (Reference Hicks, Beaudry, Hicks and Beaudry2010) and Knappett (Reference Knappett2005).

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Author comment: Archaeological approaches to plastics and plastic pollution: A critical overview — R0/PR1

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We are pleased to now submit this invited paper which we hope meets your expectations. We feel that this is a timely submission and an opportunity to present the context in which archaeology has increasingly become attuned to the Plastic Age, and the ways in which archaeologists now engage with it.

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