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Climatic changes cause synchronous population dynamics and adaptive strategies among coastal hunter-gatherers in Holocene northern Europe

Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/18241
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/qua.2019.86
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article.pdf (1.006Mb)
Akseptert manusversjon (PDF)
Dato
2020-03-16
Type
Journal article
Tidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed

Forfatter
Jørgensen, Erlend Kirkeng; Pesonen, Petro; Tallavaara, Miikka
Sammendrag
Synchronized demographic and behavioral patterns among distinct populations is a well-known, natural phenomenon. Intriguingly, similar patterns of synchrony occur among prehistoric human populations. However, the drivers of synchronous human ecodynamics are not well understood. Addressing this issue, we review the role of environmental variability in causing human demographic and adaptive responses. As a case study, we explore human ecodynamics of coastal hunter-gatherers in Holocene northern Europe, comparing population, economic, and environmental dynamics in two separate areas (northern Norway and western Finland). Population trends are reconstructed using temporal frequency distributions of radiocarbon-dated and shoreline-dated archaeological sites. These are correlated to regional environmental proxies and proxies for maritime resource use. The results demonstrate remarkably synchronous patterns across population trajectories, marine resource exploitation, settlement pattern, and technological responses. Crucially, the population dynamics strongly correspond to significant environmental changes. We evaluate competing hypotheses and suggest that the synchrony stems from similar responses to shared environmental variability. We take this to be a prehistoric human example of the “Moran effect,” positing similar responses of geographically distinct populations to shared environmental drivers. The results imply that intensified economies and social interaction networks have limited impact on long-term hunter-gatherer population trajectories beyond what is already proscribed by environmental drivers.
Er en del av
Jørgensen, E.K. (2020). Maritime Human Ecodynamics of Stone Age Arctic Norway: Developing middle-range causal linkages between climate forcing, demography, and technological responses. (Doctoral thesis). https://hdl.handle.net/10037/19458
Forlag
Cambridge University Press
Sitering
Jørgensen EKJ, Pesonen P, Tallavaara M. Climatic changes cause synchronous population dynamics and adaptive strategies among coastal hunter-gatherers in Holocene northern Europe. Quaternary Research. 2020
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Samlinger
  • Artikler, rapporter og annet (arkeologi, historie, religionsvitenskap og teologi) [298]
© University of Washington. Published by Cambridge University Press, 2020

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