Contextualizing the development of coastal adaptations in postglacial Southeast Alaska

Dissertation (Ph.D.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2021 The goal of this dissertation is to improve our understanding of human population expansions into unfamiliar environments, focusing on when and how humans adapted to the rich coastal landscape of Southeast Alaska. Investigation of the peoplin...

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Main Author: Schmuck, Nicholas S.
Other Authors: Reuther, Joshua, Clark, Jamie, Baichtal, James F., Holliday, Vance T., Plattet, Patrick
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11122/12567
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spelling ftunivalaska:oai:scholarworks.alaska.edu:11122/12567 2023-05-15T16:32:31+02:00 Contextualizing the development of coastal adaptations in postglacial Southeast Alaska Schmuck, Nicholas S. Reuther, Joshua Clark, Jamie Baichtal, James F. Holliday, Vance T. Plattet, Patrick 2021-05 http://hdl.handle.net/11122/12567 en_US eng http://hdl.handle.net/11122/12567 Department of Anthropology Human ecology Southeast Alaska Prehistoric peoples Human geography Paleo-Indians Migrations Coastal settlements Human settlements Obsidian implements Microblades Stone implements Prehistoric land settlement patterns Land discovery and exploration Doctor of Philosophy in Anthropology Dissertation phd 2021 ftunivalaska 2023-02-23T21:37:57Z Dissertation (Ph.D.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2021 The goal of this dissertation is to improve our understanding of human population expansions into unfamiliar environments, focusing on when and how humans adapted to the rich coastal landscape of Southeast Alaska. Investigation of the peopling of this region has been overshadowed by the broader narrative that the Americas may have been first colonized by a late Pleistocene coastal migration. Refinements to local sea-level and paleoecological chronologies help contextualize the dynamic landscape that these first inhabitants might have encountered, returning focus to the archaeology of Southeast Alaska itself. This research considers existing archaeological data within the theoretical framework of Human Behavioral Ecology, proposing new models to acknowledge the process of landscape learning. Landscape learning provides a mechanism for exploring human adaptation to unfamiliar landscapes, which in turn produces testable hypotheses based on the familiarity of colonizing human foragers with coastal environments. Systematic sourcing of obsidian microblade cores, ubiquitous in early Holocene sites, allows for a further assessment of landscape learning, alongside an evaluation of the relationship between local raw material constraints and technological organization. Though the oldest known archaeological sites in Southeast Alaska are firmly dated to between 10,500 and 10,000 cal BP, older occupations have been identified elsewhere on the Northwest Coast, and Tlingit and Haida oral histories record their presence on the landscape from Time Immemorial. Taken together, multiple lines of evidence point to an initial colonization of Southeast Alaska out of eastern Beringia, occurring prior to the occupation of the oldest known sites. By the early Holocene, foragers with a typical Northwest Coast diet were readily adapting to, but still in the process of learning, this complex coastal landscape. While these results challenge the long-established impression that the ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis haida tlingit Alaska Beringia University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA Fairbanks
institution Open Polar
collection University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA
op_collection_id ftunivalaska
language English
topic Human ecology
Southeast Alaska
Prehistoric peoples
Human geography
Paleo-Indians
Migrations
Coastal settlements
Human settlements
Obsidian implements
Microblades
Stone implements
Prehistoric land settlement patterns
Land discovery and exploration
Doctor of Philosophy in Anthropology
spellingShingle Human ecology
Southeast Alaska
Prehistoric peoples
Human geography
Paleo-Indians
Migrations
Coastal settlements
Human settlements
Obsidian implements
Microblades
Stone implements
Prehistoric land settlement patterns
Land discovery and exploration
Doctor of Philosophy in Anthropology
Schmuck, Nicholas S.
Contextualizing the development of coastal adaptations in postglacial Southeast Alaska
topic_facet Human ecology
Southeast Alaska
Prehistoric peoples
Human geography
Paleo-Indians
Migrations
Coastal settlements
Human settlements
Obsidian implements
Microblades
Stone implements
Prehistoric land settlement patterns
Land discovery and exploration
Doctor of Philosophy in Anthropology
description Dissertation (Ph.D.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2021 The goal of this dissertation is to improve our understanding of human population expansions into unfamiliar environments, focusing on when and how humans adapted to the rich coastal landscape of Southeast Alaska. Investigation of the peopling of this region has been overshadowed by the broader narrative that the Americas may have been first colonized by a late Pleistocene coastal migration. Refinements to local sea-level and paleoecological chronologies help contextualize the dynamic landscape that these first inhabitants might have encountered, returning focus to the archaeology of Southeast Alaska itself. This research considers existing archaeological data within the theoretical framework of Human Behavioral Ecology, proposing new models to acknowledge the process of landscape learning. Landscape learning provides a mechanism for exploring human adaptation to unfamiliar landscapes, which in turn produces testable hypotheses based on the familiarity of colonizing human foragers with coastal environments. Systematic sourcing of obsidian microblade cores, ubiquitous in early Holocene sites, allows for a further assessment of landscape learning, alongside an evaluation of the relationship between local raw material constraints and technological organization. Though the oldest known archaeological sites in Southeast Alaska are firmly dated to between 10,500 and 10,000 cal BP, older occupations have been identified elsewhere on the Northwest Coast, and Tlingit and Haida oral histories record their presence on the landscape from Time Immemorial. Taken together, multiple lines of evidence point to an initial colonization of Southeast Alaska out of eastern Beringia, occurring prior to the occupation of the oldest known sites. By the early Holocene, foragers with a typical Northwest Coast diet were readily adapting to, but still in the process of learning, this complex coastal landscape. While these results challenge the long-established impression that the ...
author2 Reuther, Joshua
Clark, Jamie
Baichtal, James F.
Holliday, Vance T.
Plattet, Patrick
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Schmuck, Nicholas S.
author_facet Schmuck, Nicholas S.
author_sort Schmuck, Nicholas S.
title Contextualizing the development of coastal adaptations in postglacial Southeast Alaska
title_short Contextualizing the development of coastal adaptations in postglacial Southeast Alaska
title_full Contextualizing the development of coastal adaptations in postglacial Southeast Alaska
title_fullStr Contextualizing the development of coastal adaptations in postglacial Southeast Alaska
title_full_unstemmed Contextualizing the development of coastal adaptations in postglacial Southeast Alaska
title_sort contextualizing the development of coastal adaptations in postglacial southeast alaska
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/11122/12567
geographic Fairbanks
geographic_facet Fairbanks
genre haida
tlingit
Alaska
Beringia
genre_facet haida
tlingit
Alaska
Beringia
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11122/12567
Department of Anthropology
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