3000 Years of Human Subsistence and Estuarine Resource Exploitation on the Rhode River Estuary, Chesapeake Bay, Maryland

Q1 Arts and Humanities
T. Rick, Leslie A. Reeder-Myers, M. J. Carr, A. Hines
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

Abstract Chesapeake Bay is home to highly productive marine ecosystems that were a key part of Native American subsistence for millennia. Despite a number of archaeological projects focused on Chesapeake Bay prehistory, key questions remain about the nature of human use of the estuary through time and across space. Recent work at 7 shell middens on the Rhode River Estuary, MD, provides insight into human subsistence and estuarine res ource exploitation from ∼3200 years ago through the mid-19th century. This is an important diachronic sequence of coastal land use and subsistence for the Chesapeake and helps fill a gap in our understanding of coastal adaptations along North America's Atlantic Coast. Despite climate change, fluctuating sea levels, and the likely appearance of maize agriculture in the area ∼1000 years ago, Native American exploitation of oysters and estuarine resources remained fairly consistent across the Early to Late Woodland. These data stand in contrast to the mid-1800s assemblage, which was likely deposited by 19th-century Euro-Americans and contains overall larger oysters perhaps obtained from deeper waters that may not have been a focus of Native American harvest. When placed in the context of other regional data, our analysis illustrates the value of shell middens for helping understand human subsistence strategies and the historical ecol ogy of the North American Atlantic Coast.
马里兰州切萨皮克湾罗德河河口3000年人类生存和河口资源开发
切萨皮克湾拥有高产的海洋生态系统,这是数千年来美洲原住民赖以生存的重要组成部分。尽管有许多考古项目关注切萨皮克湾的史前历史,但关于人类在时间和空间上对河口的利用的本质,仍然存在一些关键问题。最近在马里兰州罗德河河口的7个贝壳码头进行的工作,提供了从约3200年前到19世纪中期人类生存和河口资源开发的见解。这是切萨皮克沿海土地利用和生存的重要历时序列,有助于填补我们对北美大西洋沿岸沿海适应的理解空白。尽管气候变化、海平面波动以及大约1000年前该地区可能出现了玉米农业,但美洲原住民对牡蛎和河口资源的开采在林地早期到晚期保持了相当一致。这些数据与19世纪中期的组合形成鲜明对比,这些组合可能是由19世纪的欧美人沉积的,并且包含了可能从较深的水域获得的整体较大的牡蛎,这些牡蛎可能不是美洲原住民收获的重点。当放在其他区域数据的背景下,我们的分析说明了贝壳在帮助理解人类生存策略和北美大西洋沿岸历史生态方面的价值。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of the North Atlantic
Journal of the North Atlantic Arts and Humanities-History
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