Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-p9bg8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-24T00:23:52.853Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Hunter-gatherers subsistence and impact on fauna in the Islands of Four Mountains, Eastern Aleutians, Alaska, over 3000 yr

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 January 2019

Olga A. Krylovich*
Affiliation:
Laboratory of Historical Ecology, Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninsky pr. 33, 119071, Moscow, Russia
Dmitry D. Vasyukov
Affiliation:
Laboratory of Historical Ecology, Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninsky pr. 33, 119071, Moscow, Russia
Bulat F. Khasanov
Affiliation:
Laboratory of Historical Ecology, Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninsky pr. 33, 119071, Moscow, Russia
Virginia Hatfield
Affiliation:
Museum of the Aleutians, 314 Salmon Way, P.O. BOX 648, Unalaska, Alaska99685, USA
Dixie West
Affiliation:
Biodiversity Institute, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas66045, USA
Arkady A. Savinetsky
Affiliation:
Laboratory of Historical Ecology, Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninsky pr. 33, 119071, Moscow, Russia
*
*Corresponding author at: Laboratory of Historical Ecology, Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninsky pr. 33, 119071, Moscow, Russia. E-mail address: [email protected] (O.A. Krylovich).

Abstract

This first zooarchaeological analysis for the Islands of Four Mountains (IFM), Aleutian Islands, Alaska, provides data about local hunter-gatherer resource exploitation over three thousand yr. The majority of zooarchaeological material represents faunal resources that were harvested within several kilometers of villages. Our analysis shows that IFM subsistence system was shaped by the small size of these islands, which is mostly true for all of the Aleutian Islands. The archaeological middens indicate that Aleuts readily exploited new resources when they became available, expanding their dietary niche. Despite human harvesting, most faunal populations remained stable; however, Aleuts overexploited the storm-petrel colony on Carlisle Island.

Type
Aleutians Special Issue
Copyright
Copyright © University of Washington. Published by Cambridge University Press, 2019 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Aigner, J.S., 1976. Early Holocene evidence for the Aleut maritime adaptation. Arctic Anthropology 13, 3245.Google Scholar
Antipushina, Zh.A., Pakhnevich, A.V., 2010. On species affiliation of sea urchin genus Strongylocentrotus at the archeological sites of Bering Sea region. In: Rozhnov, S.V. (Ed.), VII All-Russian Scientific School for Young Scientists in Paleontology, Moscow, Russia. Borissiak Paleontological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, pp. 78.Google Scholar
Bailey, E.P., 1993. Introduction of Foxes to Alaskan Islands - History, Effects on Avifauna, and Eradication. United States Fish and Wildlife Service Resource Publication 193. United States Department of Interior, Homer.Google Scholar
Bergsland, K., 1994. Aleut Dictionary. Alaska Native Language Center and University of Alaska, Fairbanks.Google Scholar
Binford, L., 1980. Willow smoke and dogs’ tails: hunter-gatherer settlement systems and archaeological site formations. American Antiquity 45, 2844.Google Scholar
Bird, D.W., Richardson, J.L., Veth, P.M., Barham, A.J., 2002. Explaining shellfish variability in middens on the Meriam Islands, Torres Strait, Australia. Journal of Archaeological Science 29, 457469.Google Scholar
Boersma, P.D., Silva, M.C., 2001. Fork-tailed storm-petrel (Oceanodroma furcata). Cornell Lab of Ornithology, The Birds of North America Online (accessed January 1, 2001). http://birdsna.org/Species-Account/bna/species/ftspet Google Scholar
Boersma, P.D., Wheelwright, N.T., Nerini, M.K., Stevens Wheelwright, E., 1980. The breeding biology of the fork-tailed storm-petrel (Oceanodroma furcata). The Auk 97, 268282.Google Scholar
Byrd, G.V., Day, R.H., 1986. The avifauna of Buldir Island, Aleutian Islands, Alaska. Arctic 39, 109118.Google Scholar
Byrd, G.V., Renner, H.M., Renner, M., 2005. Distribution patterns and population trends of breeding seabirds in the Aleutian Islands. Fisheries Oceanography 14, 139159.Google Scholar
Carnarhan, J., 1979. Fox farming in the Aleutians. In: Spencer, D. (Ed.), Aleutian Islands National Wildlife Refuge. United States Fish and Wildlife Service, Anchorage, pp. 7696.Google Scholar
Causey, D., Corbett, D.G., Lefèvre, C., West, D.L., Savinetsky, A.B., Kiseleva, N.K., Khassanov, B.F., 2005. The palaeoenvironment of humans and marine birds of the Aleutian Islands: three millennia of change. Fisheries Oceanography 14, 259276.Google Scholar
Corbett, D., West, D., Lefèvre, C., 2010. History of the Western Aleutians Archaeological and Paleobiological Project. In: Corbett, D., West, D., Lefèvre, C. (Eds.), The People at the End of the World: The Western Aleutians Project and Archaeology of Shemya Island. Alaska Anthropological Association Monograph Series, Anchorage, pp. 116.Google Scholar
Corbett, D.G., 1991. Aleut Settlement Patterns in the Western Aleutian Islands, Alaska. Fairbanks, Alaska. Masters’ thesis, University of Alaska, Fairbanks.Google Scholar
Corbett, D.G., Causey, D., Clementz, M., Koch, P.L., Doroff, A., Lefèvre, C., West, D., 2008. Aleut Hunters, Sea Otters, and Sea Cows: Three Thousand Years of Interactions in the Western Aleutian Islands, Alaska. In: Rick T.C., Erlandson, J.M. (Eds.), Human Impacts on Ancient Marine Ecosystems: A Global Perspective. University of California Press, Berkeley, pp. 4376.Google Scholar
Crockford, S., Frederick, G., Wigen, R., McKechnie, I., 2004. Final Report on the Analysis of the Vertebrate Fauna from Amaknak Bridge, Unalaska, AK, UNL050. Supplement to R. Knecht, R., Davis, The Amaknak Bridge Site Data Recovery Project Final Report, Project # MGS-STP-BR-0310(S)/52930. Unpublished report on file, Alaska Department of Transportation, Anchorage.Google Scholar
Crockford, S.J., 2012. Archaeozoology of Adak Island: 6000 years of subsistence history in the central Aleutians. In: West, D., Hatfield, V., Wilmerding, E., Lefèvre, C., Gualtieri, L., (Eds.), The People Before: The Geology, Paleoecology and Archaeology of Adak Island, Alaska. British Archaeological Reports International Series 2322. Archaeopress, Oxford, pp. 109145.Google Scholar
Crockford, S.J., 2016. Islands of the Four Mountains: Vertebrate Fauna from Carlisle Island site AMK-003 (CR-02). Report submitted to D. West and V. Hatfield for the NSF funded project “Geological Hazards, Climate Change and Human/Ecosystems Resilience in the Four Mountains.” Unpublished report on file, Museum of the Aleutians, Unalaska.Google Scholar
Darwent, C M., 2004. The highs and lows of high Arctic mammals: Temporal change and regional variability in Paleoeskimo subsistence. In: Mondini, M., Muñoz, S., Wickler, S. (Eds.), Colonisation, Migration and Marginal areas: A Zooarchaeological Approach. Oxbow Books, Oxford, pp. 6273.Google Scholar
Davis, L.B., 2001. Sea Mammal Hunting and the Neoglacial: An Archaeofaunal Study of Environmental Change And Subsistence Technology At Margaret Bay, Unalaska. In: Dumond, D. (Ed.), Archaeology in the Aleut Zone of Alaska, Some Recent Research. University of Oregon Anthropological Papers, No. 58. University of Oregon Press, Eugene, pp. 7185.Google Scholar
DeNiro, M.J., 1985. Postmortem preservation and alteration of in vivo bone collagen isotope ratios in relation to palaeodietary reconstruction. Nature 317, 806809.Google Scholar
Denlinger, L.M., 2006. Alaska Seabird Information Series. US Fish and Wildlife Service, Migratory Bird Management Nongame Program, Anchorage.Google Scholar
Denniston, G.B., 1972. Ashishik Point: an Economic Analysis of a Prehistoric Aleutian Community. PhD dissertation, University of Wisconsin, Madison.Google Scholar
Desautels, R.J., McCurdy, A.J., Flynn, J.D., Ellis, R.R., 1971. Amchitka Island, Alaska, 1969–1970, Archaeological Report. United States Atomic Energy Commission Report TID-25481. Archaeological Research, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Ebert, T.A., Barr, L.M., Bodkin, J.L., Burcham, D., Bureau, D., Carson, H.S., Caruso, N., et al., 2018. Size, growth, and density data for shallow-water sea urchins from Mexico to the Aleutian Islands, Alaska, 1956–2016. Ecology 99, 761.Google Scholar
Etnier, M.A., 2002. The effects of human hunting on northern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus) migration and breeding distributions in the late Holocene. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Washington, Seattle.Google Scholar
Fitzhugh, B., Moore, S., Lockwood, C., Boone, C., 2004. Archaeological paleobiogeography in the Russian far east: The Kuril Islands and Sakhalin in comparative perspective. Asian Perspectives 43, 92122.Google Scholar
Funk, C., 2011. Rat Islands Archaeological research 2003 and 2009: Working toward an understanding of regional cultural, and environmental histories. Arctic Anthropology 48, 2551.Google Scholar
Gaston, A.J., 1992. The Ancient Murrelet. T. and A.D. Poyser, London.Google Scholar
Gaston, A.J., Shoji, A.S., 2010. Ancient Murrelet (Synthliboramphus antiquus). Cornell Lab of Ornithology, The Birds of North America Online (accessed November 12, 2010). http://birdsna.org/Species-Account/bna/species/ancmur/ Google Scholar
Gibson, D.D., Byrd, G.V., 2007. Birds of the Aleutian Islands, Alaska. Nuttal Ornithological Club and American Ornithologists’ Union, Cambridge and Washington.Google Scholar
Gorlova, E.N., Krylovich, O.A., Tiunov, A.V., Khasanov, B.F., Vasyukov, D.D., Savinetsky, A.B., 2015. Stable-isotope analysis as a method of taxonomical identification of archaeozoological material. Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology of Eurasia 43, 110121.Google Scholar
Grayson, D.K., 1981. The effects of sample size on some derived measures in vertebrate faunal analysis. Journal of Archaeological Science 8, 7788.Google Scholar
Grayson, D.K., 1984. Quantitative Zooarchaeology. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Hammer, Ø., Harper, D.A.T., Ryan, P.D., 2001. PAST: Paleontological statistics software package for education and data analysis. Palaeontologia Electronica 4, 9.Google Scholar
Harris, S., 1978. Age determination in the Red fox (Vulpes vulpes) - an evaluation of technique efficiency as applied to a sample of suburban foxes. Journal of Zoology London 184, 91117.Google Scholar
Hatfield, V., Bruner, K., West, D., Savinetsky, A., Krylovich, O., Khasanov, B., Vasyukov, D., et al., 2016. At the foot of the Smoking Mountains: The 2014 scientific investigations in the Islands of the Four Mountains. Arctic Anthropology 53, 141159.Google Scholar
Hatfield, V., West, D., Bruner, K., Savinetsky, A., Krylovich, O., Vasyukov, D., Khasonov, B., Nicolaysen, K., Okuno, M., 2019. Human resilience and resettlement among the Islands of Four Mountains, Aleutians, Alaska. Quaternary Research (this volume). https://doi.org/10.1017/qua.2018.149.Google Scholar
Hatfield, V.L., 2010. Material Culture Across the Aleutian Archipelago. Human Biology 82, 525556.Google Scholar
Hunt, G.L., Stabeno, P.J., 2005. Oceanography and ecology of the Aleutian Archipelago: spatial and temporal variation. Fisheries Oceanography 14, 292306.Google Scholar
Jochelson, W., 2002. History, Ethnology and Anthropology of the Aleut. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Jones, E.L., 2004. Dietary evenness, prey choice, and human-environmental interactions. Journal of Archaeological Science 31, 307317.Google Scholar
Jones, R.D. Jr., Byrd, G.V., 1979. Interrelations between seabirds and introduced animals. In: Bartonek, J.C., Nettleship, D.N. (Eds.), Conservation of Marine Birds of Northern North America. Wildlife Research Report 11. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Washington, DC, pp. 221226.Google Scholar
Knecht, R., Davis, R., 2003. Archaeological Evaluation of Tanaxtaxak, The Amaknak Spit Site (UNL-00055): Final Report. Museum of the Aleutians, Unalaska.Google Scholar
Knecht, R.A., Davis, R.S., 2001. A prehistoric sequence for the Eastern Aleutians. In: Dumond, D. (Ed.), Archaeology in the Aleut Zone of Alaska, Some Recent Research. University of Oregon Anthropological Papers 58. Eugene, pp. 269288.Google Scholar
Konar, B., 2000. Limited effects of a keystone species: trends of sea otters and kelp forests at the Semichi Islands, Alaska. Marine Ecology Progress Series 199, 271280.Google Scholar
Kuzmicheva, E.A., Smyshlyaeva, O.I., Khasanov, B.F., Krylovich, O.A., Vasyukov, D.D., Okuno, M., West, D.L., Hatfield, V., Savinetsky, A.B., 2019. A 7300-yr-old environmental history of seabird, human, and volcano impacts on Carlisle Island (the Islands of Four Mountains, eastern Aleutians, Alaska). Quaternary Research. https://doi.org/10.1017/qua.2018.114.Google Scholar
Laughlin, W., 1980. Aleuts: Survivors of the Bering Land Bridge. Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York.Google Scholar
Lefèvre, C., Corbett, D., Crockford, S., Czederpiltz, J., Partlow, M., West, D., 2010. Faunal remains and intersite comparisons. In: Corbett, D., West, D., Lefèvre, C. (Eds.), The People at the End of the World: The Western Aleutians Project and Archaeology of Shemya Island. Alaska Anthropological Association Monograph Series, Anchorage, pp. 133157.Google Scholar
Lefèvre, C., Corbett, D.G., West, D., Siegel-Causey, D., 1997. A Zooarchaeological Study at Buldir Island, Western Aleutians, Alaska. Arctic Anthropology 34, 118131.Google Scholar
Lefèvre, C., West, D., Corbett, D.G., 2011. Zooarchaeological Analysis at ADK-011, Adak Island, Central Aleutian Islands, Alaska. Arctic Anthropology 48, 6982.Google Scholar
Logerwell, E.A., Aydin, K., Barbeaux, S., Brown, E., Conners, M.E., Lowe, S., Orr, J.W., Ortis, I., Reuter, R., Spenser, P., 2005. Geographic patterns in the demersal ichthyofauna of the Aleutian Islands. Fisheries Oceanography 14, 93112.Google Scholar
Longin, R., 1971. New method of collagen extraction for radiocarbon dating. Nature 230, 241242.Google Scholar
Loponte, D. M., Acosta, A., 2004. Late Holocene hunter-gatherers from the Pampean Wetlands, Argentina. In: Mengoni Goñalons, (Ed.), Zooarchaeology of South America. British Archaeological Reports International Series 1298. Archaeopress, Oxford, pp. 3957.Google Scholar
Lyman, L.R., 2008. Quantitative Paleozoology. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Mallory, M.L., Hatch, S.A., Nettleship, D.N., 2012. Northern Fulmar (Fulmarus glacialis). Cornell Lab of Ornithology, The Birds of North America Online (accessed November 27, 2012). http://birdsna.org/Species-Account/bna/species/norful Google Scholar
McCartney, A.P., 1977. Prehistoric human occupation of the Rat Islands. In: Merritt, M.L., Fuller, R.G. (Ed.), The Environment of Amchitka Island, Alaska. National Technical Information Service, United States Department of Commerce, Springfield, pp. 59113.Google Scholar
Mecklenburg, C.W., Mecklenburg, T.A., Thorsteinson, L.K., 2002. Fishes of Alaska. American Fisheries Society, Bethesda.Google Scholar
Mini, A.E., Bachman, D.C., Cocke, J., Griggs, K.M., Spragens, K.A., Black, J.M., 2011. Recovery of the Aleutian cackling goose Branta hutchinsii leucopareia: 10-year review and future prospects. Wildfowl 61, 329.Google Scholar
Mordy, C.W., Stabeno, P.J., Ladd, C., Zeeman, S., Wisegarver, D.P., Salo, S.A., Hunt, G.L. Jr., 2005. Nutrients and primary production along the eastern Aleutian Island Archipelago. Fisheries Oceanography 14, 5576.Google Scholar
Mowbray, T.B., Ely, C.R., Sedinger, J.S., Trost, R.E., 2002. Cackling Goose (Branta hutchinsii). Cornell Lab of Ornithology, The Birds of North America Online (accessed January 1, 2002). http://birdsna.org/Species-Account/bna/species/cacgoo1 Google Scholar
O’Clair, C.E., 1977. Marine invertebrates in rocky intertidal communities. In: Merritt, M.L., Fuller, R.G. (Eds.), The Environment of Amchitka Island, Alaska. National Technical Information Service, United States Department of Commerce, Springfield, pp. 395449.Google Scholar
Okuno, M., Izbekov, P., Nicolaysen, K.P., Nakamura, T., Savinetsky, A.B., Vasyukov, D.D., Krylovich, O.A., et al., 2017. AMS radiocarbon dates on peat section related with tephra and archaeological sites in Carlisle Island, the Islands of Four Mountains, Alaska. Radiocarbon 59, 17711778.Google Scholar
Orchard, T.J., 2003. An Application of the Linear Regression Technique for Determining Length and Weight of Six Fish Taxa: The Role of Selected Fish Species in Aleut Paleo Diet. British Archaeological Reports International Series 1172. Archaeopress, Oxford.Google Scholar
Parnell, A., 2016. Bchron: radiocarbon dating, age-depth modelling, relative sea level rate estimation, and non-parametric phase modelling. R package version 4.2.6. https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=Bchron Google Scholar
Quimby, G.I., 1944. Aleutian Islanders: Eskimos of the North Pacific. Chicago Natural History Museum, Chicago.Google Scholar
R Core Team, 2017. R: a language and environment for statistical computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria. https://www.R-project.org/ Google Scholar
Raid, D.G., 1996. Systematics and Evolution of Littorina. The Ray Society, London.Google Scholar
Reimer, P.J., Bard, E., Bayliss, A., Beck, J.W., Blackwell, P.G., Ramsey, C.B., Buck, C.E., et al., 2013. IntCal13 and Marine13 radiocarbon age calibration curves 0–50,000 years cal BP. Radiocarbon 55, 18691887.Google Scholar
Rojek, N., Williams, J., 2019. Present day assemblage of birds and mammals in the Islands of the Four Mountains, Alaska. Quaternary Research (this volume).Google Scholar
Savinetsky, A.B., Khassanov, B.F., West, D.L., Kiseleva, N.K., Krylovich, O.A., 2014. Nitrogen isotope composition of peat samples as a proxy for determining human colonization of islands. Arctic Anthropology 51, 7885.Google Scholar
Savinetsky, A.B., West, D.L., Antipushina, Zh.A., Khassanov, B.F., Kiseleva, N.K., Krylovich, O.A., Pereladov, A.M., 2012. The reconstruction of ecosystem history of Adak Island (Aleutian Islands) during the Holocene. In: West, D., Hatfield, V., Wilmerding, E., Lefèvre, C., Gualtieri, L., (Eds.), The People Before: The Geology, Paleoecology and Archaeology of Adak Island, Alaska. British Archaeological Reports International Series 2322. Archaeopress, Oxford, pp. 77106.Google Scholar
Schmutz, J., Petersen, M.R., Rockwell, R.F., 2011. Emperor Goose (Chen canagica). Cornell Lab of Ornithology, The Birds of North America Online (accessed September 23, 2011). https://birdsna.org/Species-Account/bna/species/empgoo/introduction Google Scholar
Spaulding, A.C., 1962. Archaeological investigations on Agattu, Aleutian Islands. University of Michigan, Museum of Anthropology, Anthropological Papers 18, 374.Google Scholar
Stuiver, M., Braziunas, T.F., 1993. Modeling atmospheric 14C influences and 14C ages of marine samples to 10,000 BC. Radiocarbon 35, 137189.Google Scholar
Turner, L.M., 2008. An Aleutian Ethnography. University of Alaska Press, Fairbanks.Google Scholar
Unger, S., 2014. Qaqamiiĝu: Traditional Foods and Recipes from the Aleutian and Pribilof Islands. Aleutian Probilof Islands Association, Anchorage.Google Scholar
Vasyukov, D.D., Krylovich, O.A., West, D.L., Hatfield, V., Savinetsky, A.B., 2019. Ancient canids of Aleutian Islands (new archaeological findings from the Islands of Four Mountains). Quaternary Research (this volume).Google Scholar
Veltre, D.W., Veltre, M.J., 1983. Resource Utilization in Atka, Aleutian Islands, Alaska. Technical Paper No. 88. Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Division of Subsistence, Anchorage.Google Scholar
Veniaminov, I., 1984. Notes on the Islands of the Unalaska District. Limestone Press, Fairbanks and Kingston.Google Scholar
West, D., Antipushina, Zh., Savinetsky, A., Krylovich, O., 2012. Invertebrate remains: a pan Aleutian comparison. In: West, D., Hatfield, V., Wilmerding, E., Lefèvre, C., Gualtieri, L., (Eds.), The People Before: The Geology, Paleoecology and Archaeology of Adak Island, Alaska. British Archaeological Reports International Series 2322. Archaeopress, Oxford, pp. 177193.Google Scholar
Williams, J.C., Byrd, V.G., Konyukhov, N.B., 2003. Whiskered Auklets Aethia pygmaea, foxes, humans and how to right a wrong. Marine Ornithology 31, 175180.Google Scholar
Wing, E.S., 1963. Vertebrate remains from the Wash Island Site. Florida Anthropologist 16, 9396.Google Scholar
Yesner, D.R., 1977. Prehistoric Subsistence and Settlement in the Aleutian Islands. PhD dissertation, University of Connecticut, Storrs.Google Scholar
Zlojutro, M., 2008. Mitochondrial DNA and Y-Chromosome Variation of Eastern Aleut Populations: Implications for the Genetic Structure and Peopling of the Aleutian Archipelago. PhD dissertation, University of Kansas, Lawrence.Google Scholar
Supplementary material: File

Krylovich et al. supplementary material

Krylovich et al. supplementary material 1

Download Krylovich et al. supplementary material(File)
File 39.8 KB