Human Ecology of Beringia

· Columbia University Press
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Twenty-five thousand years ago, sea level fell more than 400 feet below its present position as a consequence of the growth of immense ice sheets in the Northern Hemisphere. A dry plain stretching 1,000 miles from the Arctic Ocean to the Aleutians became exposed between northeast Asia and Alaska, and across that plain, most likely, walked the first people of the New World. This book describes what is known about these people and the now partly submerged land, named Beringia, which they settled during the final millennia of the Ice Age.

Humans first occupied Beringia during a twilight period when rising sea levels had not yet caught up with warming climates. Although the land bridge between northeast Asia and Alaska was still present, warmer and wetter climates were rapidly transforming the Beringian steppe into shrub tundra. This volume synthesizes current research-some previously unpublished-on the archaeological sites and rapidly changing climates and biota of the period, suggesting that the absence of woody shrubs to help fire bone fuel may have been the barrier to earlier settlement, and that from the outset the Beringians developed a postglacial economy similar to that of later northern interior peoples.

The book opens with a review of current research and the major problems and debates regarding the environment and archaeology of Beringia. It then describes Beringian environments and the controversies surrounding their interpretation; traces the evolving adaptations of early humans to the cold environments of northern Eurasia, which set the stage for the settlement of Beringia; and provides a detailed account of the archaeological record in three chapters, each of which is focused on a specific slice of time between 15,000 and 11,500 years ago. In conclusion, the authors present an interpretive summary of the human ecology of Beringia and discuss its relationship to the wider problem of the peopling of the New World.

關於作者

John F. Hoffecker is a fellow of the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research at the University of Colorado, Boulder. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago and has conducted field research in Alaska and Russia. He is the author of A Prehistory of the North: Human Settlement of the Higher Latitudes, and in 2005 he received an honorary degree from the Russian Academy of Sciences. Scott A. Elias is professor of quaternary science at the Royal Holloway College, University of London, and adjoint fellow at the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research. Elias grew up in Colorado and attended the University of Colorado, receiving a B.A. and then a Ph.D. in environmental biology. His research focuses on the reconstruction of Pleistocene terrestrial environments using data from fossil insect studies.
John Hoffecker is affiliated with the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Scott Elias teaches in the Geography Department of the Royal Holloway College, University of London, and is an adjoint fellow at the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research at the University of Colorado.

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