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Climate, environment, and humans in North America's Great Basin during the Younger Dryas, 12,900-11,600 calendar years ago

机译:12,900-11,600日历年以前,北美年轻盆地的气候,环境和人类

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摘要

Global climate change associated with the onset of the Younger Dryas chronozone affected different regions of the northern hemisphere in different ways. In the Great Basin of western North America, the effect was positive for human populations. Relatively cool temperatures causing effectively wetter conditions filled some pluvial basins with shallow but permanent lakes and other basins with well-watered marshes or meadows. Vegetation communities dominated by sagebrush and grasses promoted healthy and diverse animal populations. Ten archaeological sites from the region have been dated to the Younger Dryas chronozone. Evidence from these sites indicates that Paleoindians with skull shapes and mitochondrial DNA similar to modern western North American Indians occupied the region. These early humans produced a material culture characterized predominantly by large stemmed bifacial points, although one site contained a small fluted point. Curated tool forms and technological activities represented in analyzed lithic assemblages suggest a highly mobile settlement strategy, and redundant short-term occupations of sites indicate frequent and long-distance residential moves across territories spanning distances of up to 400 km. Paleoindian subsistence pursuits focused on artiodactyls (primarily mule deer, bighorn sheep, and pronghorn antelope), leporids (chiefly jackrabbits), birds (sage grouse and waterfowl), insects (grasshoppers), and possibly fish. Easy-to-process plants like cactus pads were also eaten, but small seeds do not seem to have been an important part of Great Basin human diets until long after the Younger Dryas, closer to 9500 cal BP. The Great Basin record contains no evidence for natural catastrophe at the onset of the chronozone. Instead, the Younger Dryas appears to have been among the best of times for human foragers in this region of North America.
机译:与新得克萨斯州初年年代区有关的全球气候变化以不同的方式影响了北半球的不同地区。在北美西部的大盆地,对人类的影响是积极的。相对凉爽的温度导致有效的湿润条件,在一些浅水湖和永久性湖泊的半干旱盆地中,以及在沼泽和草甸水源充足的其他盆地中。鼠尾草和草为主的植被群落促进了健康多样的动物种群。该地区的十个考古遗址可追溯到年轻的德里亚斯年代带。这些地点的证据表明,具有类似于现代北美西部印第安人头骨形状和线粒体DNA的古印第安人占领了该地区。这些早期人类产生了一种物质培养物,其主要特征是具有较大的茎干两面点,尽管一个部位含有一个小的凹槽点。所分析的石器组合中所代表的经过整理的工具形式和技术活动表明了高度机动的沉降策略,而多余的短期场地占用表明,该住宅区频繁且长距离地跨越了400公里的范围内进行了居民移动。古印第安人的生存追求主要集中在节肢动物(主要是m鹿,大角羊和叉角羚),类脂动物(主要是长颈鹿),鸟类(鼠尾草和水禽),昆虫(蚱s)以及鱼类。还食用了易于加工的植物,例如仙人掌垫,但直到更年轻的树蛙之后,接近9500 cal BP,小种子似乎并不是大盆地人类饮食的重要组成部分。大盆地地区的记录没有任何证据表明在年代纪开始时发生自然灾害。取而代之的是,年轻的树蛙似乎已成为北美该地区人类觅食者的最佳时光。

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  • 来源
    《Quaternary International》 |2011年第2期|p.479-501|共23页
  • 作者单位

    Center for the Study of the First Americans, Department of Anthropology, Texas A&M University, 4352-TAMU, College Station, 7X 77843, USA;

    rnNevada State Office, US.D.I. Bureau of Land Management, 1340 Financial Blvd., Reno, NV 89502, USA;

    rnDivision of Earth and Ecosystem Sciences, Desert Research Institute, 2215 Raggio Parkway, Reno, NV 89512, USA;

    rnDivision of Earth and Ecosystem Sciences, Desert Research Institute, 2215 Raggio Parkway, Reno, NV 89512, USA;

    rnCenter for the Study of the First Americans, Department of Anthropology, Texas A&M University, 4352-TAMU, College Station, 7X 77843, USA;

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