首页> 外文期刊>American Journal of Physical Anthropology >Maritime adaptations and dietary variation in prehistoric Western Alaska: Stable isotope analysis of permafrost-preserved human hair
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Maritime adaptations and dietary variation in prehistoric Western Alaska: Stable isotope analysis of permafrost-preserved human hair

机译:史前西部阿拉斯加的海洋适应和饮食变化:永久冻土保存的人类头发的稳定同位素分析

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The reconstruction of diet and subsistence strategies is integral in understanding early human colonizations and cultural adaptations, especially in the Arctic - one of the last areas of North America to be permanently inhabited. However, evidence for early subsistence practices in Western Alaska varies, particularly with regards to the emergence, importance, and intensity of sea mammal hunting. Here, we present stable carbon and nitrogen isotope data from permafrost-preserved human hair from two new prehistoric sites in Western Alaska, providing a direct measure of diet. The isotope evidence indicates a heavy reliance on sea mammal protein among the earlier Norton-period group (1,750 ± 40 cal BP), confirming that the complex hunting technologies required to intensively exploit these animals were most likely already in place in this region by at least the beginning of 1st millennium AD. In contrast, analysis of the more recent Thule-period hair samples (650 ± 40 cal BP; 570 ± 30 cal BP) reveals a more mixed diet, including terrestrial animal protein. Sequential isotope analysis of two longer human hair locks indicates seasonal differences in diet in a single Norton-period individual but demonstrates little dietary variation in a Thule-period individual. These analyses provide direct evidence for dietary differences among Alaska's early Eskimo groups and confirm the antiquity of specialized sea mammal hunting and procurement technologies. The results of this study have implications for our understanding of human adaptation to maritime and high-latitude environments, and the geographical and temporal complexity in early Arctic subsistence.
机译:饮食和生存策略的重建对于理解人类早期殖民和文化适应是不可或缺的,特别是在北极地区-北美最后一个永久居住的地区之一。但是,阿拉斯加西部地区早期生存实践的证据各不相同,尤其是在海洋哺乳动物狩猎的出现,重要性和强度方面。在这里,我们展示了来自阿拉斯加西部两个新的史前遗址的永冻土保存的人类头发的稳定碳和氮同位素数据,提供了饮食的直接量度。同位素证据表明,在较早的诺顿时期(1,750±40 cal BP)组中,海洋哺乳动物蛋白高度依赖,这证实了至少在该地区已经很可能已经采用了密集捕猎这些动物的复杂狩猎技术。公元1世纪初。相比之下,对最近的Thule时期毛发样本(650±40 cal BP; 570±30 cal BP)的分析显示,饮食更加混杂,包括陆生动物蛋白。对两个较长人类发hair的顺序同位素分析表明,单个诺顿时期个体的饮食季节性存在差异,但图勒时期个体的饮食差异很小。这些分析为阿拉斯加早期爱斯基摩人之间的饮食差异提供了直接证据,并证实了专门的海洋哺乳动物狩猎和采购技术的古代。这项研究的结果对我们对人类对海洋和高纬度环境的适应以及北极早期生计的地理和时间复杂性的理解具有启示意义。

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