We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
The Rosa-Keystone Dunes Field: The geoarchaeology and paleoecology of a late Quaternary stabilized dune field in Eastern Beringia.
- Authors
Reuther, Joshua D.; Potter, Ben A.; Holmes, Charles E.; Feathers, James K.; Lanoë, François B.; Kielhofer, Jennifer
- Abstract
Stabilized sand sheets and dunes hold a remarkable amount of information on paleoenvironmental conditions under which late Quaternary landscapes evolved in northern subarctic regions. We provide the results of a project focused on understanding the development of lowland environments and ecosystems, including dunes and sand sheets, which were critical habitat for early human occupations in subarctic regions. Our study area is the Rosa-Keystone Dunes Field in the Shaw Creek Flats of the middle Tanana River basin, interior Alaska, one of the oldest continuously occupied areas in North America (14,000 cal. BP to present). The disturbance regimes of reactivated dunes and associated forest fire cycles between 12,500 and 8800 cal. BP fostered a unique early to mid-successional mixed vegetation community including herbaceous tundra, shrubs, and deciduous trees. This environment provided key habitats for large grazers and browsers, significant resources for early hunter-gatherer populations in central Alaska. After 8000 cal. BP, the expansion of black spruce and peatlands heightened landscape stability but decreased the range of local habitat for large grazers. Hunter-gatherer economic change during these periods is consistent with human responses to local and regional landscape disturbance and restructuring.
- Subjects
BERING Land Bridge; SAND dunes; ARCHAEOLOGICAL geology; PALEOECOLOGY; QUATERNARY stratigraphic geology; HUMAN ecology
- Publication
Holocene, 2016, Vol 26, Issue 12, p1939
- ISSN
0959-6836
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1177/0959683616646190