Human-Environment Interactions & Human Ecology in Western Arctic Prehistory
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 80th Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA (2015)
Northern sea ice levels are at an historical and millennial low, and nowhere are the effects of recent climate change more pronounced and destructive than in the Western Arctic, with the erosion and subsequent loss of coastal archaeological sites in this area being yet another casualty. However, the remarkably well-preserved but threatened archaeology of the Western Arctic is shedding important new light on the dynamics of the complex relationship between prehistoric Inuit/Eskimo cultures and past ecosystems. Organic artifacts and bioarchaeological material from sites in this region are feeding diverse but complementary interdisciplinary studies of diet, population genetics, zooarchaeology, paleoentomology, climate change and culture history. Working alongside local descendant communities, archaeological research can also inform understanding of the impact of contemporary climate change on northern communities. This session aims to explore aspects of human-environmental interactions, human ecology and prehistory in the Western Arctic through the lens of contemporary climate change and recent archaeological research. Our objective is to include researchers from a variety of perspectives and methodological specialisms in order to explore temporal and spatial variation and dynamism in human ecology and human-environment interactions in Western Arctic prehistory, and to consider the implications of such research for academic and indigenous stakeholders.
Other Keywords
Pottery •
Climate Change •
Sod Houses •
Alaska •
Yup'ik Eskimos •
Dietary Reconstruction •
Technology •
Archaeoentomology •
archaeobotany •
arctic
Geographic Keywords
Arctic •
North America - NW Coast/Alaska
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-10 of 10)
- Documents (10)
- Archaeology and cultural preservation: a perspective from a Yup’ik village (2015)
- Beetle, lice and flea sub-fossils as evidence for resource exploitation, the use of space and ecological conditions at the pre-contact Eskimo site of Nunalleq, south-western Alaska (2015)
- The Genetic Prehistory of the New World Arctic (2015)
- The Moose Hill Site: The Dynamic Interplay of Climate Change, Marine Productivity, Volcanism, and Cultural Transitions on the Kvichak River, Bristol Bay, Alaska. (2015)
- Nunalleq past and present – discovering a Yup’ik archaeological heritage (2015)
- Pottery use in Alaskan prehistory: an organic residue analysis approach (2015)
- Prehistory and Climate Change in Southwest Alaska (2015)
- Soils, plants and animals in the making of hunter-gatherer pottery in coastal Alaska (2015)
- Stable isotope analysis of permafrost-preserved human hair and faunal remains from Nunalleq, Alaska: dietary variation, climate change and the pre-contact Arctic food-web (2015)
- What can archaeobotanical remains from exceptionally well preserved contexts tell us about past arctic life-ways? (2015)