Climate and Culture Change in North and Northwest Alaska

The role of climate as a driver of cultural change in North and Northwest Alaska during the last two millennia has been a subject of much discussion. It has been largely ignored by some and seen as the cause for the development of whaling and the Thule migration by others. Neither extreme is particu...

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Main Author: Jensen, Austin
Other Authors: American Geophysical Union
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Hosted by Utah State University Libraries 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/ece_facpub/177
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spelling ftutahsudc:oai:digitalcommons.usu.edu:ece_facpub-1176 2023-05-15T15:07:13+02:00 Climate and Culture Change in North and Northwest Alaska Jensen, Austin American Geophysical Union 2014-12-15T08:00:00Z https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/ece_facpub/177 unknown Hosted by Utah State University Libraries https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/ece_facpub/177 Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Publications impacts of global change human impacts Electrical and Computer Engineering text 2014 ftutahsudc 2022-03-07T21:41:17Z The role of climate as a driver of cultural change in North and Northwest Alaska during the last two millennia has been a subject of much discussion. It has been largely ignored by some and seen as the cause for the development of whaling and the Thule migration by others. Neither extreme is particularly satisfactory, because of the realities of the climatic constraints operating in the Arctic and given that the populations in question were interacting socially with and affected by members of their own and neighboring groups. This paper looks at the current understanding of climate in North and Northwest Alaska for the last two millennia, a period during which there were some notable climate shifts, including the Medieval Climate Anomaly and the "Little Ice Age." This time period encompassed some significant cultural alterations including the Birnirk/Thule transition, the Thule migration and the development of the regional variations that are characteristic of Late Western Thule. The timing of the climatic and cultural events has been examined to determine if there were instances when they coincided. Cultural changes which could be correlated to climate change were analyzed, to determine if the nature of the observed cultural changes plausibly can be related to the correlated climate change. Text Arctic Climate change Alaska Utah State University: DigitalCommons@USU Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Utah State University: DigitalCommons@USU
op_collection_id ftutahsudc
language unknown
topic impacts of global change
human impacts
Electrical and Computer Engineering
spellingShingle impacts of global change
human impacts
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Jensen, Austin
Climate and Culture Change in North and Northwest Alaska
topic_facet impacts of global change
human impacts
Electrical and Computer Engineering
description The role of climate as a driver of cultural change in North and Northwest Alaska during the last two millennia has been a subject of much discussion. It has been largely ignored by some and seen as the cause for the development of whaling and the Thule migration by others. Neither extreme is particularly satisfactory, because of the realities of the climatic constraints operating in the Arctic and given that the populations in question were interacting socially with and affected by members of their own and neighboring groups. This paper looks at the current understanding of climate in North and Northwest Alaska for the last two millennia, a period during which there were some notable climate shifts, including the Medieval Climate Anomaly and the "Little Ice Age." This time period encompassed some significant cultural alterations including the Birnirk/Thule transition, the Thule migration and the development of the regional variations that are characteristic of Late Western Thule. The timing of the climatic and cultural events has been examined to determine if there were instances when they coincided. Cultural changes which could be correlated to climate change were analyzed, to determine if the nature of the observed cultural changes plausibly can be related to the correlated climate change.
author2 American Geophysical Union
format Text
author Jensen, Austin
author_facet Jensen, Austin
author_sort Jensen, Austin
title Climate and Culture Change in North and Northwest Alaska
title_short Climate and Culture Change in North and Northwest Alaska
title_full Climate and Culture Change in North and Northwest Alaska
title_fullStr Climate and Culture Change in North and Northwest Alaska
title_full_unstemmed Climate and Culture Change in North and Northwest Alaska
title_sort climate and culture change in north and northwest alaska
publisher Hosted by Utah State University Libraries
publishDate 2014
url https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/ece_facpub/177
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
Alaska
op_source Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Publications
op_relation https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/ece_facpub/177
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