水下人类学

Q1 Arts and Humanities
Ashley Lemke
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引用次数: 0

摘要

狩猎和采集是人类历史最悠久的适应方式。觅食民族在地球上迁徙,遇到各种类型的栖息地,以灵活创新的方式与环境打交道,见证了巨大的气候变化。更新世以来最显著的地球变化之一是全球水位的波动及其对暴露和淹没地貌的影响。这种动态变化会对全球的觅食群落产生重大影响,但无论是水位波动还是人类对水位波动的反应都不是千篇一律的。水位波动的速度是变化的,包括长期、缓慢的变化、灾难性事件和其他可能在一代人的基础上就能观察到的事件。人类对水位变化的适应可能包括流动性和生计的改变等。进一步的应对措施,如创造和分享有关水位事件的传统生态知识,很可能已编纂成文化习俗,而这些在考古记录中并不容易辨别。为了解决这些问题,本文对北美五大湖区的水下考古遗址进行了个案研究,这些遗址是狩猎采集者在现已被淹没的地貌上生活的证据。有九千多年历史的石砌狩猎遗址代表了水位较低时期的一种特殊生存策略,也是传统生态知识的一个考古实例。该项目将考古学和虚拟现实技术与土著合作伙伴和其他知识持有者结合起来,探索狩猎者对全新世水位的反应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Anthropology underwater
Hunting and gathering is the longest human adaptation ever to exist. Foraging peoples moved over the planet, encountered every type of habitat, engaged with their environments in flexible and innovative ways, and were witnesses to vast climatic changes. One of the most notable planetary shifts since the Pleistocene is fluctuation in global water levels and its impact on the landscapes it exposed and submerged. This dynamic would have significantly impacted foraging communities across the globe, but neither water fluctuations nor human responses to them were uniform. Rates of water oscillations were variable, including long-term, slow changes, catastrophic events and others that were likely observable on a generational basis. Human adaptations to shifting water levels likely included mobility and changes in subsistence, among others. Further responses, such as the creation and sharing of traditional ecological knowledge about water level events, were likely codified in cultural practices that are not easily discernible in the archaeological record. To address these issues, this paper presents a case study of submerged archaeological sites in the North American Great Lakes, evidence of a hunter-gatherer occupation on a now submerged landscape. Nine-thousand-year-old stone-built hunting sites represent a specific subsistence strategy used during a time of lower water levels, and an archaeologically visible example of traditional ecological knowledge. This project brings together archaeology and virtual reality with indigenous partners and other knowledge holders to explore forager responses to Holocene water levels.
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Hunter Gatherer Research
Hunter Gatherer Research Arts and Humanities-Archeology (arts and humanities)
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