图勒迁移作为早期美洲人类的模拟:评估过度杀戮、贸易、气候强迫和标量压力的情景

IF 1.6 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
O. Mason
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引用次数: 7

摘要

沿海迁移是线性的,依赖于交通工具,因此克洛维斯人之前的沿海迁移应该从其起源(如图勒迁移)预测,而不是从其目的地预测。像克洛维斯一样,图勒史学暗示了一种由贪婪的“过度捕杀”海豹猎人和捕鲸者冒险进入无人居住的北极高地的快速、气候强迫的迁徙——这种模式现在是不可接受的。来自墓穴和众多墓葬的图勒数据集,包括木材、象牙和骨骼技术,传达了促进移民的因素:地位争夺、社会不平等和当地人口过剩,但没有与挪威或多塞特的铁贸易。新出现的年表将图勒人迁移的时间定位在较冷的13世纪,而政治民族地理学则记录了图勒人的祖先社会Birnirk或Punuk,出现在白令海峡,仍然由老白令海文化主导。来自几次图勒迁移的数据,包括石器技术和古代DNA,促进了对沿海白令陆桥停滞和海带高速公路情景的重新研究,并将重点转移到库页岛和日本。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Thule Migrations as an Analog for the Early Peopling of the Americas: Evaluating Scenarios of Overkill, Trade, Climate Forcing, and Scalar Stress
ABSTRACT Coastal migration is linear and transport-reliant so that pre-Clovis coastal migration should be anticipated from its origin, as in the Thule migration, not its destination. Thule historiography, like Clovis, implicated a rapid, climate-forced migration by rapacious “over-killing” seal-hunters and whalers venturing into unoccupied high arctic landscapes—a model now insupportable. Thule datasets, from middens and numerous burials, include wood, ivory, and bone technologies that convey the factors promoting emigration: status striving, social inequality, and local overpopulation, but not an iron trade with Norse or Dorset. The emerging chronology situates the Thule migrations during a cooler thirteenth century while political ethnogeography records that ancestral Thule societies, Birnirk or Punuk, arose within a Bering Strait still dominated by Old Bering Sea culture. Data from the several Thule migrations, including lithic technology and ancient DNA, foster the re-examination of the coastal Beringian Standstill and Kelp highway scenarios, with a redirected focus on Sakhalin and Japan.
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来源期刊
PaleoAmerica
PaleoAmerica Earth and Planetary Sciences-Paleontology
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
期刊介绍: PaleoAmerica disseminates new research results and ideas about early human dispersal and migrations, with a particular focus on the Americas. It fosters an interdisciplinary dialog between archaeologists, geneticists and other scientists investigating the dispersal of modern humans during the late Pleistocene. The journal has three goals: First and foremost, the journal is a vehicle for the presentation of new research results. Second, it includes editorials on special topics written by leaders in the field. Third, the journal solicits essays covering current debates in the field, the state of research in relevant disciplines, and summaries of new research findings in a particular region, for example Beringia, the Eastern Seaboard or the Southern Cone of South America. Although the journal’s focus is the peopling of the Americas, editorials and research essays also highlight the investigation of early human colonization of empty lands in other areas of the world. As techniques are developing so rapidly, work in other regions can be very relevant to the Americas, so the journal will publish research relating to other regions which has relevance to research on the Americas.
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