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首页> 外文期刊>Journal of island and coastal archaeology >The Kelp Highway Hypothesis: Marine Ecology, the Coastal Migration Theory, and the Peopling of the Americas
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The Kelp Highway Hypothesis: Marine Ecology, the Coastal Migration Theory, and the Peopling of the Americas

机译:海带高速公路假说:海洋生态学,沿海迁徙理论和美洲人民

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In this article, a collaborative effort between archaeologists and marine ecologists, we discuss the role kelp forest ecosystems may have played in facilitating the movement of maritime peoples from Asia to the Americas near the end of the Pleistocene. Growing in cool nearshore waters along rocky coastlines, kelp forests offer some of the most productive habitats on earth, with high primary productivity, magnified secondary productivity, and three-dimensional habitat supporting a diverse array of marine organisms. Today, extensive kelp forests are found around the North Pacific from Japan to Baja California. After a break in the tropics—where nearshore mangrove forests and coral reefs are highly productive—kelp forests are also found along the Andean Coast of South America. These Pacific Rim kelp forests support or shelter a wealth of shellfish, fish, marine mammals, seabirds, and seaweeds, resources heavily used historically by coastal peoples. By about 16,000 years ago, the North Pacific Coast offered a linear migration route, essentially unobstructed and entirely at sea level, from northeast Asia into the Americas. Recent reconstructions suggest that rising sea levels early in the postglacial created a highly convoluted and island-rich coast along Beringia's southern shore, conditions highly favorable to maritime hunter-gatherers. Along with the terrestrial resources available in adjacent landscapes, kelp forests and other nearshore habitats sheltered similar suites of food resources that required minimal adaptive adjustments for migrating coastal peoples. With reduced wave energy, holdfasts for boats, and productive fishing, these linear kelp forest ecosystems may have provided a kind of “kelp highway” for early maritime peoples colonizing the New World.
机译:在本文中,考古学家和海洋生态学家之间的共同努力,我们讨论了海带森林生态系统在促进更新世末期亚洲人从亚洲到美洲的海上航行中可能发挥的作用。海带森林生长在多岩石的海岸线上的凉爽近岸水域中,提供了地球上一些生产力最高的栖息地,具有较高的初级生产力,放大的次级生产力以及支持多种海洋生物的三维栖息地。今天,从日本到下加利福尼亚州,在北太平洋周围发现了大量海带森林。在热带地区休息后(近岸红树林和珊瑚礁的生产力很高),在南美安第斯海岸沿岸也发现了海带森林。这些环太平洋海带森林支持或庇护大量贝类,鱼类,海洋哺乳动物,海鸟和海藻,这些资源是沿海人民历来大量使用的资源。到大约16,000年前,北太平洋海岸提供了一条线性迁移路线,从东北亚到美洲基本上是无障碍且完全在海平面上。最近的重建表明,冰河后期初期海平面上升,在贝林根(Beringia)的南海岸形成了一个高度曲折且岛屿丰富的海岸,这对海上狩猎采集者非常有利。海带森林和其他近岸生境以及邻近景观中可用的陆地资源,为类似的粮食资源提供了庇护所,这些资源需要对沿海人民的迁徙进行最小的适应性调整。这些线性海带森林生态系统具有降低的波能,船只的固定装置和生产性捕鱼的功能,可能为殖民新世界的早期海洋人民提供了一种“海带高速公路”。

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