Paleoethnobotany in Interior Alaska

Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2016 Vegetation and plant resources can impact forager mobility and subsistence strategies. However, misconceptions about the preservation of organics in subarctic archaeological contexts and underestimations of the importance of plant resources to forag...

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Main Author: Holloway, Caitlin R.
Other Authors: Potter, Ben A., Bigelow, Nancy H., Reuther, Joshua D., Clark, Jamie L.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11122/6614
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spelling ftunivalaska:oai:scholarworks.alaska.edu:11122/6614 2023-05-15T18:28:35+02:00 Paleoethnobotany in Interior Alaska Holloway, Caitlin R. Potter, Ben A. Bigelow, Nancy H. Reuther, Joshua D. Clark, Jamie L. 2016-05 http://hdl.handle.net/11122/6614 en_US eng http://hdl.handle.net/11122/6614 Department of Anthropology Thesis ma 2016 ftunivalaska 2023-02-23T21:36:40Z Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2016 Vegetation and plant resources can impact forager mobility and subsistence strategies. However, misconceptions about the preservation of organics in subarctic archaeological contexts and underestimations of the importance of plant resources to foraging societies limit paleoethnobotanical research in high-latitude environments. This research draws upon concepts from human behavioral ecology to address questions relating to site seasonality, plant resource use, land use, and deposition and taphonomy. The model developed in this thesis outlines expectations of seasonal archaeobotanical assemblages for Late Pleistocene and Holocene sites in interior Alaska. I consider these expectations in light of plant macroremains found in anthropogenic features from Components 1 and 3 (approximately 13,300 and 11,500 cal yr BP, respectively) at the Upward Sun River site, located in central Alaska. Site-specific methods include bulk sampling of feature matrix in the field and wet-sieving matrix in the laboratory to collect organic remains. Analytical measures of density, diversity, and ubiquity tie together the model expectations and the results from Upward Sun River. The dominance of common bearberry in the Component 1 archaeobotanical assemblage meets the expectations of a late summer or fall occupation. This suggests that site occupants may have focused on mitigating the risk of starvation in winter months by foraging for seasonally predictable and storable resources. The variability in results from the Component 3 features could relate to longer-term occupations that extended from mid-summer to early fall, in which site occupants foraged for locally available and predictable plant resources such as blueberry or low-bush cranberry species. In this thesis, I argue that large mammal resources were a key component in Late Pleistocene and Holocene subsistence strategies. However, foragers were flexible in their behavior and also targeted small mammals, fish, waterfowl, and plant ... Thesis Subarctic Alaska University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA Fairbanks
institution Open Polar
collection University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA
op_collection_id ftunivalaska
language English
description Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2016 Vegetation and plant resources can impact forager mobility and subsistence strategies. However, misconceptions about the preservation of organics in subarctic archaeological contexts and underestimations of the importance of plant resources to foraging societies limit paleoethnobotanical research in high-latitude environments. This research draws upon concepts from human behavioral ecology to address questions relating to site seasonality, plant resource use, land use, and deposition and taphonomy. The model developed in this thesis outlines expectations of seasonal archaeobotanical assemblages for Late Pleistocene and Holocene sites in interior Alaska. I consider these expectations in light of plant macroremains found in anthropogenic features from Components 1 and 3 (approximately 13,300 and 11,500 cal yr BP, respectively) at the Upward Sun River site, located in central Alaska. Site-specific methods include bulk sampling of feature matrix in the field and wet-sieving matrix in the laboratory to collect organic remains. Analytical measures of density, diversity, and ubiquity tie together the model expectations and the results from Upward Sun River. The dominance of common bearberry in the Component 1 archaeobotanical assemblage meets the expectations of a late summer or fall occupation. This suggests that site occupants may have focused on mitigating the risk of starvation in winter months by foraging for seasonally predictable and storable resources. The variability in results from the Component 3 features could relate to longer-term occupations that extended from mid-summer to early fall, in which site occupants foraged for locally available and predictable plant resources such as blueberry or low-bush cranberry species. In this thesis, I argue that large mammal resources were a key component in Late Pleistocene and Holocene subsistence strategies. However, foragers were flexible in their behavior and also targeted small mammals, fish, waterfowl, and plant ...
author2 Potter, Ben A.
Bigelow, Nancy H.
Reuther, Joshua D.
Clark, Jamie L.
format Thesis
author Holloway, Caitlin R.
spellingShingle Holloway, Caitlin R.
Paleoethnobotany in Interior Alaska
author_facet Holloway, Caitlin R.
author_sort Holloway, Caitlin R.
title Paleoethnobotany in Interior Alaska
title_short Paleoethnobotany in Interior Alaska
title_full Paleoethnobotany in Interior Alaska
title_fullStr Paleoethnobotany in Interior Alaska
title_full_unstemmed Paleoethnobotany in Interior Alaska
title_sort paleoethnobotany in interior alaska
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11122/6614
geographic Fairbanks
geographic_facet Fairbanks
genre Subarctic
Alaska
genre_facet Subarctic
Alaska
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11122/6614
Department of Anthropology
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