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Palaeoeconomy more than demography determined human impact in Arctic Norway

Palaeoeconomy more than demography determined human impact in Arctic Norway
Palaeoeconomy more than demography determined human impact in Arctic Norway
Population size has increasingly been taken as the driver of past human environmental impact worldwide, and particularly in the Arctic. However, sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA), pollen and archaeological data show that over the last 12,000 years, paleoeconomy and culture determined human impacts on the terrestrial ecology of Arctic Norway. The large Mortensnes site complex (Ceavccageađgi, 70°N) has yielded the most comprehensive multiproxy record in the Arctic to date. The site saw occupation from the Pioneer period (c. 10,000 cal. years BP) with more intensive use from c. 4,200 to 2,000 cal. years BP and after 1,600 cal. years BP. Here, we combine on-site environmental archaeology with a near-site lake record of plant and animal sedaDNA. The rich animal sedaDNA data (42 taxa) and on-site faunal analyses reveal switches in human dietary composition from early-Holocene fish + marine mammals, to mixed marine + reindeer, then finally to marine + reindeer + domesticates (sheep, cattle, pigs), with highest reindeer concentrations in the last millennium. Archaeological evidence suggests these changes are not directly driven by climate or variation in population densities at the site or in the region, but rather are the result of changing socio-economic activities and culture, probably reflecting settlers’ origins. This large settlement only had discernable effects on its hinterland in the last 3,600 years (grazing) and more markedly in the last 1,000 years through reindeer keeping/herding and, possibly domestic stock. Near-site sedaDNA can be linked to and validate the faunal record from archaeological excavations, demonstrating that environmental impacts can be assessed at a landscape scale.
arctic ecology, hunter-gatherer-fishers, sedimentary ancient DNA, sustainability, climate human impact
2752-6542
1
Brown, Tony
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Rijal, Dilli
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Heintzman, Peter
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Clarke, Charlotte
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Blankholm, Hans Peter
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Hoeg, Helge
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Lammers, Youri
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Brathern, Kari Anne
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Edwards, Mary
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Alsos, Inger
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Brown, Tony
c51f9d3e-02b0-47da-a483-41c354e78fab
Rijal, Dilli
5c2fb168-b2e6-41c7-8da2-35c282132702
Heintzman, Peter
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Clarke, Charlotte
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Blankholm, Hans Peter
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Hoeg, Helge
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Lammers, Youri
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Brathern, Kari Anne
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Edwards, Mary
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Alsos, Inger
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Brown, Tony, Rijal, Dilli, Heintzman, Peter, Clarke, Charlotte, Blankholm, Hans Peter, Hoeg, Helge, Lammers, Youri, Brathern, Kari Anne, Edwards, Mary and Alsos, Inger (2022) Palaeoeconomy more than demography determined human impact in Arctic Norway. PNAS Nexus, 1 (1), 1. (doi:10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac209).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Population size has increasingly been taken as the driver of past human environmental impact worldwide, and particularly in the Arctic. However, sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA), pollen and archaeological data show that over the last 12,000 years, paleoeconomy and culture determined human impacts on the terrestrial ecology of Arctic Norway. The large Mortensnes site complex (Ceavccageađgi, 70°N) has yielded the most comprehensive multiproxy record in the Arctic to date. The site saw occupation from the Pioneer period (c. 10,000 cal. years BP) with more intensive use from c. 4,200 to 2,000 cal. years BP and after 1,600 cal. years BP. Here, we combine on-site environmental archaeology with a near-site lake record of plant and animal sedaDNA. The rich animal sedaDNA data (42 taxa) and on-site faunal analyses reveal switches in human dietary composition from early-Holocene fish + marine mammals, to mixed marine + reindeer, then finally to marine + reindeer + domesticates (sheep, cattle, pigs), with highest reindeer concentrations in the last millennium. Archaeological evidence suggests these changes are not directly driven by climate or variation in population densities at the site or in the region, but rather are the result of changing socio-economic activities and culture, probably reflecting settlers’ origins. This large settlement only had discernable effects on its hinterland in the last 3,600 years (grazing) and more markedly in the last 1,000 years through reindeer keeping/herding and, possibly domestic stock. Near-site sedaDNA can be linked to and validate the faunal record from archaeological excavations, demonstrating that environmental impacts can be assessed at a landscape scale.

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Accepted/In Press date: 23 September 2022
Published date: 7 October 2022
Keywords: arctic ecology, hunter-gatherer-fishers, sedimentary ancient DNA, sustainability, climate human impact

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 474881
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/474881
ISSN: 2752-6542
PURE UUID: 15ea02e7-d877-4f84-a6b8-63acd5adf091
ORCID for Tony Brown: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1990-4654
ORCID for Mary Edwards: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3490-6682

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Date deposited: 06 Mar 2023 17:47
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:09

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Contributors

Author: Tony Brown ORCID iD
Author: Dilli Rijal
Author: Peter Heintzman
Author: Charlotte Clarke
Author: Hans Peter Blankholm
Author: Helge Hoeg
Author: Youri Lammers
Author: Kari Anne Brathern
Author: Mary Edwards ORCID iD
Author: Inger Alsos

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