Title: Pre-Columbian Archaeology of North America
1Pre-Columbian Archaeology of North America
- Weeks 6
- Regional Chronologies
- The Arctic and Sub-arctic
2Regional Divisions
- In the study of aboriginal peoples in North
America, both ethnographic and archaeological,
the continent is generally divided into a number
of regions - These will for the basis for our discussions of
regional chronologies - The focus will here will be on the Holocene
3Regional Characteristics (1)
- Arctic
- Stretching from western Alaska across the entire
continent to Greenland - Area north of the tree line
- Classic tundra conditions during the Holocene.
- Cold, desert-like conditions.
- Growing season ranges from 50 to 60 days.
- Average winter temperature is -34 C
- Average summer temperature is 3-12 C
- Yearly precipitation, including melting snow, is
1525 cm - Flora
- Low shrubs, sedges (Cyperaceae), reindeer moss
(Cladonia rangifera), liverworts (Hepaticae),
and grasses - 400 varieties of flowers
- crustose and foliose lichen
4Vegetational Zones of North America
5Tundra (Alaska National Wildlife Refuge)
6Coastal tundra
7Arctic Fauna Terrestrial Mammals
- Terrestrial herbivores
- Caribou (Rangifer tarandus) sob
- Musk oxen (Ovibus moschatus) pižmon
- Arctic hare (Lepus arcticus) zajíc polární
- Lemming (Synaptomys spp.) lumík
- Terrestrial carnivores
- Wolf (Canis lupus)
- Arctic fox (Alopex lagopus) liška polární
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9Arctic Fauna Marine Mammals (1)
- Seals (true/eared)
- Harp seal (Phoca groenlandicus) tulen gronský
- Adult males grow to about 1.7 m and 130 kg
females are smaller - Ringed seal (Phoca hispida) tulen kroužkovaný
- Adult ringed seals are 99-157 cm in length and
weigh 45-107 kg - Ribbon seal (Phoca fasciata) tulen pruhovaný
- Adult ribbon seals average 155-165 cm in length
and 70-80 kg in weight - Bearded seal (Erignathus barbatus) tulen vousatý
- Adult seals are 2.1-2.5 m in length, and weigh
about 200-360 kg - Walrus (Odobenus rosmarus) mrož
- Atlantic walrus males average 3.0 m in length and
weigh approximately 800-900 kg. Pacific walrus
males are somewhat larger, averaging 3.2 m and
approximately 1200 kg. Females are generally
smaller - Northern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus) lachtan
medvedí - Adult male 2 m, 135-270 kg. Average adult female
1.3 m, 30-45 kg
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11Arctic Fauna Marine Mammals (2)
- Whales (toothed/baleen ozubení/kosticovici)
- Beluga (Didelphinapterus leucas) beluha
- Adults measure 3-4.6 m and weigh 1350-1500 kg
- Narwhal (Monodon monoceros) narval
- Adults 4-4.9 m, 900-1600 kg, tooth 2-3 m in
length - Gray whale (Eschrichtius robustus) plejtvákovec
šedý - Adults are 13.8-15 m long and weigh about 33,000
kg - Northern right whale (Eubalaena glacialis)
velryba biskajská - Adults are 15-15.2 m long and weigh about 54,000
kg - Bowhead whale (Balaena mysticetus) velryba
gronská - Adults are 15-18.5 m long and weigh 72-91,000 kg
- Polar bear (Ursus maritimus) medved lední
- Male polar bears grow two to three times the size
of female polar bears - Males weigh about 350 to more than 650 kg and
are about 2.5-3 m long - Females about 150 to 250 kg and are about 2 to
2.5 m
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14Physical Anthropology
- Modern groups in the Arctic form a group distinct
from the rest of the Americas aboriginal
inhabitants - This can be seen in a number of physiological and
linguistic areas - Eskimo-Aleut languages are related to languages
spoken in eastern Siberia and not to other
languages of North America - Blood type distribution (see table)
- Y-chromosome and mtDNA differences
- 32 Y-chromosome haplotypes
- Appears to indicate relationship (Haplotype 31)
with groups in central Siberia
Group Type O Type A Type B Type AB
Eskimo (Alaska) 38 44 13 15
Indians (USA) 79 16 4 1
Navajo 73 27 0 0
Blackfoot 17 82 0 1
Czech 30 44 18 9
15Genetic distance between human populations based
on research by Cavalii-Sforza
16- Figure 4. Distribution of haplogroup frequencies
(pie charts) among Amerindian populations does
not correspond in any simple way to
language-group affiliations, suggesting that a
tripartite model of migration to the New World
(based on three hypothesized language groups) may
be too simple. However, virtually all of the
northern Na-Dene mtDNAs belong to haplogroup A,
whereas those of the southern Na-Dene also
include some from haplogroups B, C and D,
indicating that the southern populations have
mixed with the neighboring Amerindian populations
since their arrival in the American Southwest
some 500-to-1, 000 years ago. Certain other
trends are also evident Haplogroup A declines in
frequency from north to south, whereas
haplogroups C and D increase in frequency. By
contrast, there is no obvious clinal distribution
for haplogroup B (aside from its absence in
northern North America). Whether these
distributions reflect the original pattern of
settlement in the Americas or subsequent genetic
differentiation is not entirely clear. - From Mitochondrial DNA and the Peopling of the
New World by Theodore G. Schurr. In American
Scientist, 20008(3)
17Arctic (1)
- Arctic Small Tool tradition
- 4200 2800 BP
- First identified in 1964 at Cape Denbigh, Seward
Peninsula (Alaska) - Spread from eastern Siberia where microblade
technology has a long tradition. - Considered to be ancestral to modern Inuit/Eskimo
peoples - First occupation of northernmost regions,
including Greenland - Finely made microblades, spalled burins, small
side and end scrapers, and side and end blades - Projectile points are triangular or pointed at
both ends. - Structures
- West small camps and larger base camps with
semi-subterranean, sod roofed houses - East Oval and circular dwellings are indicated
by rings of boulders probably were used to hold
down the edges of a tent. Charcoal and burnt bone
found in the interior of the tent ring indicates
that the shelter was heated with a central fire.
As well circular soapstone dishes may have been
used as lamps or heating vessels. - Diverse economic activities including hunting
(caribou (R. tarandus) and sea mammals), fishing
18Arctic (2)
- Coastal regions of southeastern Alaska were
distinct in having strongly maritime traditions - Importance of slate tools, evidence of greater
cultural complexity (mortuary rituals) - On the Aleutian Islands, there is the Aleutian
Tradition which continues up to the modern era
(c. 1800 AD) - A core and flake tradition, with bifacial
projectile points and knives, adzes and ulu
blades, chisels, and awls (etc.), that remained
fairly stable throughout the life of the
tradition. There are also elaborate bone harpoon
heads, and bone and ivory ornaments, whose
shifting styles help date sites.
19Knives
- Left Ulu (womans knife) made of ground slate in
a bone handle - Right Mans knife made from ivory
20Arctic (3)
- Norton Tradition
- Evolved out of Arctic Small Tool tradition
- 3000 1200 BP
- Restricted to the western Arctic (Alaska)
- Stone tool assemblage similar to ASTt
- An Arctic Small Tool tradition tool base except
microblades and the burin technology is gone
first pottery vessels (fiber-tempered, stamped
pottery from Asia) and stone lamps for burning
oil toggling harpoons and polished slate
implements. - Structures/Residence Pattern
- First definitive shift toward establishing
permanent settlements on the seacoast
substantial year-round semi-subterranean houses
dense long-term occupation (hundreds of houses
occur at some sites) - Elaborate ivory carvings
- Perhaps related to Siberian styles
- Major changes in subsistence strategies
- A more maritime focus, year round sea mammal
hunting both in open water and through winter
ice, intensive fishing caribou and small mammal
hunting remain important in early part of this
period.
21Arctic (4)
- Dorset Tradition
- Found in eastern Arctic
- 1800 900 BP
- Also develops out of ASTt
- Different subsistence strategy
- The winter/spring season focused on sea mammal
hunting (whales, seals, walrus) in the summer
and fall, caribou were hunted with spears and
fish (salmon, char) captured with fish harpoons
and compound leisters in rivers. - Rectangular, semi-subterranean winter houses,
winter snow houses (igloos), and round summer
tends were built. - Tools include snow knives, blubber lamps, a
ground slate industry, distinctive harpoon head
forms, sealing projectile points. - Elaborate and highly evolved artistic tradition
that includes carved wood, bone, and ivory
depictions of humans, spirit monsters, and
animals objects are of a magico-religious
nature supernatural universe. - Lacks many elements found in the Norton and later
traditions, including harpoon floats, the maupok
method of hunting seals at breathing holes, dog
sleds, cold-trap entrances for houses, bow and
arrows, throwing boards (they used simple lances
and harpoons). - Disappears
22Arctic (5)
- Thule Tradition
- Begins c. 1200 BP in the Bering Straights region
- Expands eastward, replacing the Dorset Tradition
by c. 900 BP in all areas (including Greenland) - This is the modern Inuit/Eskimo culture
- By c. AD 1000, all the major items of historic
Eskimo culture existed throughout the Alaskan
coast, including fully equipped kayaks, umiaks,
dog sleds, harpoon line floats, sunken houses
with deep entrances, heavy use of polished slate
tools, pottery (thick and gravel tempered), and a
wide variety of specialized tools and weapons
(e.g., components for specialized arrows, darts,
and spears for fish, birds, and different size
sea mammals toggling and non-toggling harpoons
dart heads for land mammals snow goggles). An
extensive organic inventory survives in the
archaeological record. These items revolutionized
coastal life throughout the Arctic. Some appear
in the archaeological for the first time (kayaks,
umiaks, dog sleds, efficient toggling harpoons,
harpoon line floats, harpoon mounted ice picks).
Objects of iron (demonstrating contact with
Siberian peoples.
23Arctic (6)
- Thule was a highly specialized culture that
emphasized whale hunting where possible and
winter ice hunting. Large villages at favorable
whaling locations organized economically and
ceremonially into whaling crews and whaleboat
owning entrepreneurs as in the historic period. - Their art is a high point of all Eskimo art
traditions. Elaborate carved ivory objects.
Changes through time in this tradition seen
mainly in differences in harpoon styles and art
motifs. - Thule Expansion Eastward. After c. AD 900, Thule
traits and people move southward to the Pacific
coast, into the Alaskan interior (e.g., Arctic
Woodland culture), and across northern Canada to
Greenland. Probably related to a warm weather
cycle (Medieval Warm Period) that shifted pack
ice northward and changed path of sea-mammal
migrations. Retreated after AD 1300 in cold
period. - In eastern regions pottery replaced by soapstone
vessels - Hunters of seals, walrus, and large whales. Used
seal-skin covered kayak and more substantial
umiak for hunting and rapid transportation in
summer dog sleds in winter. Used bow and arrow
for caribou and musk ox. Harpoons often propelled
by throwing board. - Three house types.
- Snow house, tent (animal skin), sod house
(wood/bone and stone frame covered in earth)
24Arctic Small Tool Tradition IllustrationsA
MapB A complete flaked stone end-blade from the
Arctic Small Tool traditionC A fragment of a
flaked stone end-blade (i.e, the sharp blade that
would be mounted at the tip of a bone, antler or
ivory harpoon or spear)D This Arctic Small Tool
tradition tent ring is referred to as a
"mid-passage" house. The outer ring of rocks
would have weighed down the edges of a tent. The
"mid-passage" is formed by the parallel lines of
rocks dividing the interior of the house at the
center of the mid-passage there is a small hearth
or fireplace in which willow twigs or driftwood
would have been burned.
25Norton Tradition IllustrationsA Ivory figurine,
c. 1900 BP. Markings on the smaller face
demonstrate tattooingB Difference between a
non-toggling and toggling harpoon, which toggles
beneath the skin and blubber where it cannot be
broken off by ice and holds heavier prey like
whales and walrus.C Stone lamps
26Dorset Tradition IllustrationsA MapB Top left
to right flaked stone end-blade to fit in the
tip of a harpoon head 3 harpoon heads a
so-called "spatula" carving bottom a harpoon
foreshaft and harpoon head.C Ivory doll, 7 cm
tall
27Umiak
28Inuit kayak (max. length 5 m)
29Kayak loaded with sealskin float, weapons, etc.
30Sled (toy)
31House Types
32Subterranean Thule HouseDevon Island, Canadian
Arctic
33Sub-arctic
- Sub-arctic
- Runs across the whole of the continent, from
interior Alaska to Labrador peninsula and
Newfoundland - Taiga (continuous coniferous forest)
- The taiga is a moist sub-arctic forest that
begins where the tundra ends. - Winters are long, dark and cold with lots of snow
(min. - 60C) - Summers are warm and short when the daylight can
be up to 20 hours long (max. 40C). - Annual precipitation between 300-1000 mm
- Major type of vegetation is coniferous
evergreens. - Fir (Abiesi), spruce (Picea), birch (Betula),
juniper (Juniperus), tamarack (Larix) - Non-coniferous trees and plants
- Alder (Alnus), aspen (Populus), willow
- Lichens, mosses, sedges, grasses, bushes, berries
34Sub-arctic Fauna (1)
- Herbivores
- Caribou
- Moose (Alces alces) los
- Snowshoe hare (Lepus americanus) zajíc menivý
- Beaver (Castor canidensis) bobr kanadský
- Lemming
- Vole (Microtus spp.) hraboš
- American red squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus)
cikarí cervený (syn. veverice cervená)
35Sub-arctic Fauna (2)
- Carnivores
- Bears
- Grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis)
- American black bear (Ursus americanus) baribal
- Canines
- Wolf
- Coyote (Canis latrans)
- Red fox (Vulpes vulpes)
- Felines
- Lynx (Lynx canadensis)
- Mustelids
- Wolverine (Gulo gulo) rosomák
- Otter, marten, mink, weasle
36Sub-Arctic
- Northern Archaic
- 6500 2500 BP
- Research inhibited by a general lack of
well-stratified sites, impact of climate, size of
region - Particularly in western half of region
- Northern variant of generalized Archaic found
throughout North America - Technologically related to ASTt
- Microblades, burins
- Depended on caribou and fishing in rivers and
streams for their livelihood, staying inland and
near the trees most of the time. - Most probably represents ancestral Indian
populations as opposed to paleo-Eskimo. - Throughout this region Arctic and Sub-Arctic
traditions expanded and retracted depending on
variations in the climate - Archaic hunters of ultimate eastern North
American origin, possessing notched projectile
points, spread northward from the Plains with the
expanding boreal forest to displace indigenous
populations whose tool kits were characterized by
microblades (ASTt) - Known as Shield Cultures in east.
37Shield Cultures (1)
- Both Late Eastern Shield and Late Western Shield
cultures developed out of the Middle Shield
culture (6,000 to 2,500 BP) - 2500 BP to European contact (17th to 19th
centuries) - The basis for distinguishing between these two
closely related cultures is largely technological
as their settlement patterns and subsistence
practices were very similar, if not identical, in
most instances. - Late Eastern Shield culture retained the older
stone working traditions of their predecessors
whereas Late Western Shield culture continued a
late Middle Shield culture development in the
west that involved abandoning the use of massive
siliceous deposits, such as quartzite and
rhyolite, with their resulting large bifacial and
unifacial tools, in favour of Hudson Bay Lowlands
nodular cherts with their comparatively
diminutive tool products. - While both cultures made extensive use of local
veins of quartz as expedient cutting and scraping
chunks and flakes, the practice appears to have
been far more common in the east. Late Eastern
Shield culture also rejected pottery vessels as
an important item in their tool kit unlike their
western kinsmen.
38Shield Cultures (2)
- In fact, the limited pottery from Late Eastern
Shield sites may simply represent the products of
Late Western Shield culture and Late Great
Lakes-St. Lawrence culture women moving from
their homelands in the west and south to join the
bands of their husbands to the north and east.
Occurrences of pottery becomes progressively
sparse as one advances eastward and northward and
thus further away from the homelands of the
hypothesized cultures within which it represented
a significant element of technology. - This progressively fading pattern of pottery
vessel distribution to the east maintains itself
into Period V (A.D. 500 to European contact)
where the East Cree, Montagnais (Naskapi), and
Attikamek of Late Eastern Shield culture
territory basically rejected pottery
manufacturing unlike their western and southern
kinsmen the West Main Cree, Algonquin, Southern
and Northern Ojibwa, Western Woods Cree, and the
Late Winnipeg Saulteaux. What pottery does occur
is clearly related to western styles and was
likely a product of women from western bands
joining their husbands in the eastern bands. - Subsistence and settlement patterns remain
unchanged from the preceding period and, for that
matter, were to remain unchanged up to the time
of European contact. - Sites such as the Chicoutimi site at the juncture
of the Saugenay and Chicoutimi rivers contained
occupational debris spanning more than 3,000
years and terminated with a historical documented
Montagnais occupation. Unfortunately the cultural
deposits at this site were hopelessly intermixed.
Like other large sites, the Chicoutimi site was a
favourable location where a band or, more likely,
a number of bands gathered on a seasonal basis.
39Western/Northwestern Sub-Arctic
- 2500 BP to European Contact (nineteenth century)
- Interior culture must be viewed in relationship
to its geographical setting. The region is
physiographically dominated by the northwest
trending Cordillera consisting of coastal and
interior mountain ranges with intervening smaller
mountain ranges and plateaus. - Major drainages are the Yukon and the Mackenzie,
two of the largest river systems in the world. - Within this complex mosaic of landforms, small
hunting bands relied upon fish and caribou as
well as regionally and seasonally available small
game, waterfowl, moose, and berries. - To survive in a region with widely dispersed food
resources and peak periods of abundance and
scarcity has always demanded a broadly based and
flexible foraging pattern.
40Distribution of Sub-Arctic CulturesMap III -
Cultural Distributions, 4,000 to 1,000 B.C.A
Middle Maritime B Middle Great Lakes-St.
Lawrence C Middle Shield D Middle Plains E
Middle Plateau F Early West Coast G Middle
Northwest Interior H Early Palaeo-Eskimo
41Interior projectile points (Yukon) wide range of
sizes, shapes, styles