Absent ice patches and the continued reliability of caribou as a resource to prehistoric hunters throughout the Holocene

Ice patches have recently exploded as a new field of research in archaeology and as a vital source to understanding prehistory. The uniqueness of ice patch archaeology lies within the preservation of organic materials offering exceptional information about cultural behavior. Ice patches were traditi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Koszalinski, Holly Lynn
Other Authors: Tiffany, Joseph
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/64626
id ftunivwiscon:oai:minds.wisconsin.edu:1793/64626
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivwiscon:oai:minds.wisconsin.edu:1793/64626 2023-05-15T16:39:32+02:00 Absent ice patches and the continued reliability of caribou as a resource to prehistoric hunters throughout the Holocene Koszalinski, Holly Lynn Tiffany, Joseph 2013-01-30T17:08:32Z application/pdf http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/64626 en_US eng http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/64626 Paleoecology -- Holocene Caribou hunting -- Northern Hemisphere -- History Prehistoric peoples -- Food -- Northern Hemisphere Hunting Prehistoric -- Northern Hemisphere Thesis 2013 ftunivwiscon 2022-04-13T19:22:32Z Ice patches have recently exploded as a new field of research in archaeology and as a vital source to understanding prehistory. The uniqueness of ice patch archaeology lies within the preservation of organic materials offering exceptional information about cultural behavior. Ice patches were traditionally used as hunting locations throughout prehistoric and protohistoric times. With rapidly changing climate conditions, ice patches are melting quickly and in some cases surface ice has completely melted away leaving behind the accumulation of caribou dung. In the 2010 field season, the Basalt Lake ice patches within the Denali Highway region of central Alaska were surveyed and it was observed that caribou still frequented the area even in the absence of surface ice. This paper will examine the significance of continual use of ice patch areas by caribou in the absence of surface ice and what this meant for prehistoric hunters throughout the Holocene during greater climatic shifts. Thesis Ice Patch Archaeology Alaska University of Wisconsin: Digital Collections Basalt Lake ENVELOPE(-125.497,-125.497,52.967,52.967)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Wisconsin: Digital Collections
op_collection_id ftunivwiscon
language English
topic Paleoecology -- Holocene
Caribou hunting -- Northern Hemisphere -- History
Prehistoric peoples -- Food -- Northern Hemisphere
Hunting
Prehistoric -- Northern Hemisphere
spellingShingle Paleoecology -- Holocene
Caribou hunting -- Northern Hemisphere -- History
Prehistoric peoples -- Food -- Northern Hemisphere
Hunting
Prehistoric -- Northern Hemisphere
Koszalinski, Holly Lynn
Absent ice patches and the continued reliability of caribou as a resource to prehistoric hunters throughout the Holocene
topic_facet Paleoecology -- Holocene
Caribou hunting -- Northern Hemisphere -- History
Prehistoric peoples -- Food -- Northern Hemisphere
Hunting
Prehistoric -- Northern Hemisphere
description Ice patches have recently exploded as a new field of research in archaeology and as a vital source to understanding prehistory. The uniqueness of ice patch archaeology lies within the preservation of organic materials offering exceptional information about cultural behavior. Ice patches were traditionally used as hunting locations throughout prehistoric and protohistoric times. With rapidly changing climate conditions, ice patches are melting quickly and in some cases surface ice has completely melted away leaving behind the accumulation of caribou dung. In the 2010 field season, the Basalt Lake ice patches within the Denali Highway region of central Alaska were surveyed and it was observed that caribou still frequented the area even in the absence of surface ice. This paper will examine the significance of continual use of ice patch areas by caribou in the absence of surface ice and what this meant for prehistoric hunters throughout the Holocene during greater climatic shifts.
author2 Tiffany, Joseph
format Thesis
author Koszalinski, Holly Lynn
author_facet Koszalinski, Holly Lynn
author_sort Koszalinski, Holly Lynn
title Absent ice patches and the continued reliability of caribou as a resource to prehistoric hunters throughout the Holocene
title_short Absent ice patches and the continued reliability of caribou as a resource to prehistoric hunters throughout the Holocene
title_full Absent ice patches and the continued reliability of caribou as a resource to prehistoric hunters throughout the Holocene
title_fullStr Absent ice patches and the continued reliability of caribou as a resource to prehistoric hunters throughout the Holocene
title_full_unstemmed Absent ice patches and the continued reliability of caribou as a resource to prehistoric hunters throughout the Holocene
title_sort absent ice patches and the continued reliability of caribou as a resource to prehistoric hunters throughout the holocene
publishDate 2013
url http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/64626
long_lat ENVELOPE(-125.497,-125.497,52.967,52.967)
geographic Basalt Lake
geographic_facet Basalt Lake
genre Ice Patch Archaeology
Alaska
genre_facet Ice Patch Archaeology
Alaska
op_relation http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/64626
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