Arctic and Subarctic Coasts: Current Research and Modern Challenges

Part of: Society for American Archaeology 82nd Annual Meeting, Vancouver, BC (2017)

The coasts of the Arctic and Subarctic are dynamic ecosystems, posing challenges to the people who have occupied them, live there today, and the archaeologists who conduct research there. Throughout much of the Holocene they were occupied by diverse peoples who had complex relationships with their environment, as do the people who live in these regions today. This session examines current research focusing on those relationships, from processes of colonization and adaptation to the mitigation of modern impacts on heritage resources resulting from a changing global climate. Archaeologists who focus on the Circumpolar North incorporate a wide array of theoretical and methodological approaches; however, all of them realize the broader importance of the study of northern peoples and the ecosystems of which they are a part. The papers presented in this session are a sampling of the innovative and challenging projects that focus on northern coasts. They represent the current state of Arctic and Subarctic archaeological coastal research and examine its future.

Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-14 of 14)

  • Documents (14)

Documents
  1. Birds of a Feather? Bird Conservation and Archaeology in the Gulf of Alaska (2017)
  2. Food or Fur: Dog Butchery on Kodiak Island, Alaska (2017)
  3. From caribou to seal: The implications of changes in subsistence focus from Birnirk to Thule at Cape Espenberg (2017)
  4. Iita before the fall: Mitigation of a unique stratified site in the high Arctic of Greenland (2017)
  5. Late Dorset and Thule Inuit Hunting Technologies and Archaeofaunas: Implications for Societal Differences (2017)
  6. Maritime Archaic Subsistence in Newfoundland, Canada: Insights from δ13C and δ15N of Bulk Bone Collagen and Amino Acids (2017)
  7. Migration and Isolation in the Okhotsk Tradition of Hokkaido and the Kuril Islands (2017)
  8. A Millennium of Fishing: A Cross-Cultural Comparison of Faunal Remains from the Shaktoolik Airport Site (NOB-072), Norton Sound, Alaska (2017)
  9. Nunalleq: Archaeologies of Climate Change and Community in Coastal Western Alaska (2017)
  10. Rethinking Chronology in Barrow, Alaska: Assessing ∆R Variation and Applying Bayesian Chronological Models (2017)
  11. Revisiting the Morris Bay Kayak: Analysis and Implications for Inughuit Hunting Practices before the 19th Century (2017)
  12. Statistically limiting the error associated with old wood in archaeological dating: A case study from the Kuril Islands (2017)
  13. Subarctic Coastal Pioneers: Evidence and Implications of a New Maritime Archaic Site in Eastern Newfoundland (2017)
  14. "Untangling the timbers": New Perspectives on Birnirk Architecture in Northwestern Alaska (2017)