Tracking the Chemical Footprints of Taltheilei Settlement Strategies: Multi–Element and Molecular Analyses of Soils from the Ikirahak Site in Southern Nunavut

This dissertation presents the results of chemical and physical soil surveys undertaken at a 2,000 year old Taltheilei hunter–gatherer site off the west coast of Hudson Bay in southern Nunavut. My goal is to develop archeological soil chemistry research in Canada. Research focuses on refining method...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Butler, Donald
Other Authors: Dawson, Peter
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Graduate Studies 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11023/2592
https://doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/28496
Description
Summary:This dissertation presents the results of chemical and physical soil surveys undertaken at a 2,000 year old Taltheilei hunter–gatherer site off the west coast of Hudson Bay in southern Nunavut. My goal is to develop archeological soil chemistry research in Canada. Research focuses on refining methods for determining whether northern soils can accept and preserve anthropogenic chemical residues, and for distinguishing natural from human chemical patterns. Linking the concepts of soilscapes and site structures, I also discuss how anthropogenic chemical archives are formed, and I highlight what these records tell us about hunter–gatherer site functions, residential mobility, and site seasonality. Archaeological site structure and soilscape analyses are used to define said variables at the Ikirahak study site. Results contribute to building understandings of the preservation of anthropogenic chemical records and to clarifying previously unrecognized Taltheilei lifeways, in turn better resolving diversities in their cultural identity. Over 100 soil and reference samples were analyzed. Methods included multi–element analyses using x–ray fluorescence and inductively coupled plasma – mass spectroscopy, mineral and bimolecular analyses using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, along with assessments of a suite of physical and chemical soil parameters such as porosity and cation exchange capacity. Statistical and spatial patterning were assessed using enrichment factor analysis, analysis of variance, principal components analysis, inverse distance weighted interpolation, and trend surface analysis. MgO, CaO, Cu, P2O5, Ba, K2O, MnO, and Fe2O3 were useful indicators of human influences on the Ikirahak soils. Calcite, carbonate hydroxylapatite, montgomeryite, and trans fats derived from human activities were preserved in the site soils. Crystallinity indices and carbonate/phosphate ratios for tested bone samples indicated high intensity burning. Soilscape analyses at Ikirahak provides unique insight into how Taltheilei ...