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A Multiscalar Consideration of the Athabascan Migration
Genetic and linguistic evidence suggests that, after living in the Subarctic for thousands of years, Northern Athabascans began migrating to the American Southwest around 1,000 years ago. Anthropologists have proposed that this partial out-migration and several associated in situ behavioral changes...
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Published in: | American antiquity 2020-07, Vol.85 (3), p.470-491 |
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creator | Doering, Briana N. Esdale, Julie A. Reuther, Joshua D. Catenacci, Senna D. |
description | Genetic and linguistic evidence suggests that, after living in the Subarctic for thousands of years, Northern Athabascans began migrating to the American Southwest around 1,000 years ago. Anthropologists have proposed that this partial out-migration and several associated in situ behavioral changes were the result of a massive volcanic eruption that decimated regional caribou herds. However, regional populations appear to increase around the time of these changes, a demographic shift that may have led to increased territoriality, resource stress, and specialization. Building on existing syntheses of cultural dynamics in the region, analyses of excavated materials, and landscape data from Alaska and Yukon, this research shows that the Athabascan transition represented a gradual shift toward resource specialization in both salmon and caribou with an overall increase in diet breadth, indicating a behavioral transition that is more consistent with gradual demographic change. Further, this behavioral shift was already in motion at the time of the volcanic eruption circa 1150 cal BP and suggests that the ultimate migration from the area was the result of demographic pressures. In sum, this research elaborates on the complex dynamics of resilience and adaptation in hunter-gatherer groups and provides a testable model for explaining past migrations. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1017/aaq.2020.34 |
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Building on existing syntheses of cultural dynamics in the region, analyses of excavated materials, and landscape data from Alaska and Yukon, this research shows that the Athabascan transition represented a gradual shift toward resource specialization in both salmon and caribou with an overall increase in diet breadth, indicating a behavioral transition that is more consistent with gradual demographic change. Further, this behavioral shift was already in motion at the time of the volcanic eruption circa 1150 cal BP and suggests that the ultimate migration from the area was the result of demographic pressures. 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source | Cambridge Journals Online; JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection; International Bibliography of Art (IBA); ProQuest One Literature |
subjects | Archaeology Athabaskan Diaspora Ecologists Ecology Excavation Historic artifacts Linguistics Lithic Migration Na Dene languages Population Salmon Stress Volcanic eruptions |
title | A Multiscalar Consideration of the Athabascan Migration |
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