Surviving Turbulent Times : Climate Change, Cultural Connections and Shifting Adaptations in Hokkaido-Sakhalin during the Pleistocene-Holocene Transition

The Pleistocene-Holocene transition brought turbulent times to human societies confronted by rapid climatic fluctuations, shifts inbiogeographic zones and the flooding of continental shelves. While the disappearance of Doggerland’s inhabited landscapes underthe grey waters of the North Sea marks the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jordan, Peter, Vasilevski, Alexander, Kato, Hirofumi, Grishchenko, Vyacheslav
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/f7c7590e-a089-4778-ab4c-aef53520d08d
Description
Summary:The Pleistocene-Holocene transition brought turbulent times to human societies confronted by rapid climatic fluctuations, shifts inbiogeographic zones and the flooding of continental shelves. While the disappearance of Doggerland’s inhabited landscapes underthe grey waters of the North Sea marks the culmination of these changes for European Archaeologists, our aim is this paper is todraw parallels with Northeast Asia, where the islands of Hokkaido and Sakhalin once formed a major terrestrial extension of the vastEurasian landmass. During the LGM, this terrestrial corridor offered an “escape route” from the harsh glacial conditions of Siberia,but as temperatures gradually warmed, prehistoric societies faced a growing subsistence crisis as landscapes flooded and faunalresources declined. Our goal is to understand how these societies responded to a warming – yet frequently unstable – climate in anever-shrinking terrestrial world. Late Glacial warming witnessed to a brief expansion of Incipient Jōmon traditions into Hokkaido, cutshort by the Younger Dryas. As Holocene warming accelerated, a broader suite of innovations including house pits, plant use and pottery expanded across Sakhalin and Hokkaido. The onset of the 8.2 cal. BP cold event partly reversed this trend, and brought Siberian lithic traditions (Blade Arrow Culture) back down through Sakhalin and into Hokkaido, signalling the temporary return to more mobilesub-arctic lifeways and a growing reliance on costal resources. Understanding human- and community-scale responses to thesemajor shifts is challenging because the region’s acidic soils mean that bone material is not preserved, other than at a few shell-midden sites in Hokkaido. At the same time, the region’s extended hunter-gatherer pottery traditions offer rich scope for undertaking biomolecular reconstruction of changing cooking practices across major cultural and environmental transitions. We report recentresults, examine remaining gaps in knowledge, and present ideas for future research. Vasilevski, ...