Caribou hunting at ice patches: seasonal mobility and long-term land-use in the southwest Yukon

Recently documented ice patch sites in the southwest Yukon are ideal for evaluating precontact hunter-gatherer land-use patterns in the western subarctic. Located in the alpine of the mountainous regions of the boreal forest, ice patches are associated with well preserved hunting equipment, caribou...

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Main Author: Bowyer, Vandy
Other Authors: Schweger, Charles (Anthropology)
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10048/1895
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-AEU.10048-18952011-12-13T13:53:36ZSchweger, Charles (Anthropology)Bowyer, Vandy2011-04-14T17:05:30Z2011-04-14T17:05:30Z2011-04-14T17:05:30Zhttp://hdl.handle.net/10048/1895Recently documented ice patch sites in the southwest Yukon are ideal for evaluating precontact hunter-gatherer land-use patterns in the western subarctic. Located in the alpine of the mountainous regions of the boreal forest, ice patches are associated with well preserved hunting equipment, caribou (Rangifer tarandus) dung and an abundance of faunal remains dating to over 8000 years ago. However, current models are inadequate for explaining caribou hunting at ice patches as they tend to emphasize large-scale communal hunts associated with latitudinal movements of caribou. Much less is known about the alititudinal movment of caribou and the associated hunting forays to ice patches in the alpine. Based on literature from caribou biology an altitudinal hunting model is proposed. During summer months caribou are predictable in their use of ice patches for relief from insect harassment. Pollen dated from caribou dung frozen in organic layers from the Granger (JdUt-1) and Friday Creek (JcUu-1) ice patches was analysed and compared to pollen assemblages from modern caribou dung to test whether ancient caribou were using these locations during summer months. The multivariate statistical technique, Nonmetric Mutlidimensional Scaling shows that ancient pollen assemblages are unlike any modern dung. Results indicate that pollen derived from dung is complex and various temporal transformations and taphonomic factors such as: (i) the use of modern analogue samples; (ii) changes in phenology; (iii) mode of pollination and; (iv) caribou feeding strategies must be understood before making interpretations on seasonality from dung pollen. I propose that a qualitative model of seasonal pollen signatures also be used to evaluate ancient pollen spectra, especially when there is no modern analogue. Regardless of these factors, the identification of a diversity of forbs and the presence of insect-pollinated taxa such as Polemonium and Epilobium suggest that some of the dung was deposited by caribou in the summer. Ancient hunters, knowing that caribou aggregate in mixed herds on ice patches in summer months, took advantage of this behaviour. Hunting equipment found on ice patches indicates that atlatls (8360± 60 to 1250± 40 yrs BP) and bow and arrows (1300 ± 70 to 90 ± 40 yrs BP) and hunting blinds were part of the ice hunting strategy. Faunal analysis suggests caribou was the primary game animal hunted at ice patches, although sheep (Ovis dalli) may have been important at some locations. Developing an altitudinal migration model provides a fuller picture of caribou hunting at alpine locations in the southwest Yukon and assists in understanding Holocene precontact hunting and land-use patterns in the western subarctic.7237708 bytesapplication/pdfencaribouice patchesseasonalitycaribou dungsouthwest Yukonhunter-gatherersarchaeologyCaribou hunting at ice patches: seasonal mobility and long-term land-use in the southwest YukonThesisDoctor of PhilosophyDoctoralDepartment of AnthropologyUniversity of Alberta2011-06Ives, Jack (Anthropology)Kooyman, Brian (Archaeology, University of Calgary)Willoughby, Pam (Anthropology)Paszkowski, Cynthia (Biology)Friesen, Max Trevor (Anthropology, University of Toronto)
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic caribou
ice patches
seasonality
caribou dung
southwest Yukon
hunter-gatherers
archaeology
spellingShingle caribou
ice patches
seasonality
caribou dung
southwest Yukon
hunter-gatherers
archaeology
Bowyer, Vandy
Caribou hunting at ice patches: seasonal mobility and long-term land-use in the southwest Yukon
description Recently documented ice patch sites in the southwest Yukon are ideal for evaluating precontact hunter-gatherer land-use patterns in the western subarctic. Located in the alpine of the mountainous regions of the boreal forest, ice patches are associated with well preserved hunting equipment, caribou (Rangifer tarandus) dung and an abundance of faunal remains dating to over 8000 years ago. However, current models are inadequate for explaining caribou hunting at ice patches as they tend to emphasize large-scale communal hunts associated with latitudinal movements of caribou. Much less is known about the alititudinal movment of caribou and the associated hunting forays to ice patches in the alpine. Based on literature from caribou biology an altitudinal hunting model is proposed. During summer months caribou are predictable in their use of ice patches for relief from insect harassment. Pollen dated from caribou dung frozen in organic layers from the Granger (JdUt-1) and Friday Creek (JcUu-1) ice patches was analysed and compared to pollen assemblages from modern caribou dung to test whether ancient caribou were using these locations during summer months. The multivariate statistical technique, Nonmetric Mutlidimensional Scaling shows that ancient pollen assemblages are unlike any modern dung. Results indicate that pollen derived from dung is complex and various temporal transformations and taphonomic factors such as: (i) the use of modern analogue samples; (ii) changes in phenology; (iii) mode of pollination and; (iv) caribou feeding strategies must be understood before making interpretations on seasonality from dung pollen. I propose that a qualitative model of seasonal pollen signatures also be used to evaluate ancient pollen spectra, especially when there is no modern analogue. Regardless of these factors, the identification of a diversity of forbs and the presence of insect-pollinated taxa such as Polemonium and Epilobium suggest that some of the dung was deposited by caribou in the summer. Ancient hunters, knowing that caribou aggregate in mixed herds on ice patches in summer months, took advantage of this behaviour. Hunting equipment found on ice patches indicates that atlatls (8360± 60 to 1250± 40 yrs BP) and bow and arrows (1300 ± 70 to 90 ± 40 yrs BP) and hunting blinds were part of the ice hunting strategy. Faunal analysis suggests caribou was the primary game animal hunted at ice patches, although sheep (Ovis dalli) may have been important at some locations. Developing an altitudinal migration model provides a fuller picture of caribou hunting at alpine locations in the southwest Yukon and assists in understanding Holocene precontact hunting and land-use patterns in the western subarctic.
author2 Schweger, Charles (Anthropology)
author_facet Schweger, Charles (Anthropology)
Bowyer, Vandy
author Bowyer, Vandy
author_sort Bowyer, Vandy
title Caribou hunting at ice patches: seasonal mobility and long-term land-use in the southwest Yukon
title_short Caribou hunting at ice patches: seasonal mobility and long-term land-use in the southwest Yukon
title_full Caribou hunting at ice patches: seasonal mobility and long-term land-use in the southwest Yukon
title_fullStr Caribou hunting at ice patches: seasonal mobility and long-term land-use in the southwest Yukon
title_full_unstemmed Caribou hunting at ice patches: seasonal mobility and long-term land-use in the southwest Yukon
title_sort caribou hunting at ice patches: seasonal mobility and long-term land-use in the southwest yukon
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10048/1895
work_keys_str_mv AT bowyervandy caribouhuntingaticepatchesseasonalmobilityandlongtermlanduseinthesouthwestyukon
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