RT info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart T1 Chapter 3 - The legacy of nature enshrined in cultural landscapes A1 Calonge Cano, Guillermo K1 Patrimonio Territorial K1 Paisaje cultural K1 Geografía K1 Patrimonio territorial K1 Paisaje cultural K1 54 Geografía K1 5403.01 Geografía Cultural AB The aim is to consider Nature as a whole as an object of study in Physical Geography, but in close connection and interaction with Human Geography, because the subject matter and raison d’être of Geography is, inescapably, the study of the «humanised landscape» (García, 2001: 45). Nature can also be called the «physical environment», «natural environment», «natural landscapes», «ecological environment» or «ecological complex». However, in this work of research, for the sake of both brevity and clarity, Nature will be used as the equivalent of «natural landscapes» and «physical environment». What is important in any of these denominations is that the natural elements can be conceived as external to human activity, but at the same time as conditioning elements of the said activity to varying degrees and on different scales; an aspect in which the great French geographer Max Sorre was a pioneer at the end of the first half of the 20th century, while still being a valid reference today (Sorre, 1943: 15). Having assumed this approach to Nature in Physical Geography, the enormous influence of human intervention (or anthropogenic action) over the centuries onthe physical environment can be inferred and demonstrated. In thissense, many so-called «natural» landscapes can be considered cultural,since they are the tangible and demonstrable result of the materialand immaterial culture of human societies. Human societies use thesaid landscapes, to different degrees, and in doing so humanise them.With this argument and several examples (mostly from the IberianPeninsula), the aim is to clarify the fallacies and insufficiencies of neodeterminism,which is still the dominant epistemological approachamong those who, such as researchers and professionals, considerthemselves «naturalists»: geographers, biologists, ecologists, forestryengineers and geologists, etc. PB Thomson Reuters Aranzadi SN 978-84-9152-760-2 YR 2017 FD 2017 LK http://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/36881 UL http://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/36881 LA eng NO Manero Miguel, F.; García Cuesta, J. L. (Coords.) (2017): Territorial Heritage & Spatial Planning. A Geographical Perspective. Ed. Thomson Reuters. The Global Law Collection. Navarra. 327 págs. ISBN – 978-84-9152-762-6 NO Producción Científica DS UVaDOC RD 20-abr-2024