Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-2xdlg Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-24T17:44:14.455Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Refining the Paleo-Aleut to Neo-Aleut transition using a new ΔR for the eastern Aleutian Islands, Alaska

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 January 2019

Dixie West
Affiliation:
Biodiversity Institute, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045, USA
Bulat Khasanov
Affiliation:
Laboratory of Historical Ecology, Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninsky pr. 33, 119071, Moscow, Russia
Olga Krylovich*
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, Alaska 99685, USA
Timur Khasanov
Affiliation:
Laboratory of Historical Ecology, Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninsky pr. 33, 119071, Moscow, Russia
Dmitry Vasyukov
Affiliation:
Laboratory of Historical Ecology, Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninsky pr. 33, 119071, Moscow, Russia
Arkady 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: okrylovich@gmail.com (O.A. Krylovich).

Abstract

Using six paired terrestrial and marine organics collected in the Islands of Four Mountains, Alaska, we present a new regional correction factor, ΔR (495±20 yr), for the eastern Aleutians. We compare our ΔR with previous North Pacific marine corrections. Using the ΔR for the eastern Aleutians, we calibrated the radiocarbon dates of 80 human skeletons recovered from village site Chaluka and cave burials at Ship Rock and Kagamil Islands. These burial places contain two morphologically and genetically distinct humans—an early form called Paleo-Aleut and a later form called Neo-Aleut. Researchers have contested (1) the timing of Neo-Aleut movements into the Aleutians, and (2) Neo-Aleut interactions with Paleo-Aleuts. Our recalibrations indicate that the oldest Paleo-Aleut burial (1135 BC) occurred at Chaluka and the youngest Paleo-Aleut cave burial occurred at Kagamil during the fourteenth century (AD 1305). Neo-Aleuts buried their dead at Chaluka by AD 1375. The oldest definitive Neo-Aleut cave burial occurred during the fifteenth century (AD 1420) at Ship Rock. Eastern Aleuts buried their dead in caves for centuries, with the youngest Neo-Aleut buried at Kagamil circa AD 1865.

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., 1970. The unifacial, core, and blade site on Anangula Island, Aleutians. Arctic Anthropology 7, 5988.Google Scholar
Aigner, J., Veltre, D., 1976. The distribution and pattern of umqan burial on southwest Umnak Island. Arctic Anthropology 13, 113127.Google Scholar
Aigner, J., Veltre, D., Fullem, B., Veltre, M., 1976. An infant umqan burial from southwest Umnak Island. Arctic Anthropology 13, 128131.Google Scholar
Bank, T., 1956. Birthplace of the Winds. Thomas Y. Crowell Company, New York.Google Scholar
Black, L., 1983. Some problems in the interpretation of Aleut prehistory. Arctic Anthropology 20, 4978.Google Scholar
Black, L., 1984. Atka: An Ethnohistory of the Western Aleutians. Limestone Press, Kingston.Google Scholar
Black, L., 2003. Aleut Art. Aleutian/Pribilof Islands Association, Inc., Anchorage.Google Scholar
Black, L., Liapunova, R.G. 1988. Aleut Islanders of the North Pacific. In: W. Fitzhugh, A. Crowell (Eds.), Crossroads of Continents: Cultures of Siberia and Alaska. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC, pp. 5257.Google Scholar
Black, R.F., 1976. Late-Quaternary glacial events, Aleutian Islands, Alaska. Quaternary Glaciations in the Northern Hemisphere: IUGS-UNESCO International Geological Correlation Program, Project 73, 124.Google Scholar
Byers, D.A., Yesner, D.R., Broughton, J.M., Coltrain, J.B., 2011. Stable isotope chemistry, population histories and later prehistoric subsistence change in the Aleutian Islands. Journal of Archaeological Science 38, 183196.Google Scholar
Coltrain, J.B., 2010. Temporal and dietary reconstruction of past Aleut populations: stable- and radio-isotope evidence revisited. Arctic 63, 391398.Google Scholar
Coltrain, J.B., Hayes, M.G., O’Rourke, D.H., 2006. Hrdlička’s Aleutian population-replacement hypothesis. Current Anthropology 47, 537548.Google Scholar
Cooper, R., 1991. Report of Investigation for Site CR-2 (BLM AA-12203). The Aleut Corporation Site BLM-AA12203. Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act Office, Anchorage, Alaska.Google Scholar
Corbett, D.G., 2011. Two Chief’s Houses from the Western Aleutian Islands. Arctic Anthropology 48, 316.Google Scholar
Corbett, D.G., Causey, D., Clementz, M., Koch, P.L., Doroff, A., Lefevre, 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
Corbett, D.G., Lefevre, C., Siegel-Causey, D., 1997. The western Aleutians: Cultural isolation and environmental change. Human Ecology 25, 459479.Google Scholar
Corbett, D., Lefèvre, C., West, D., 2010. Chronology and settlement patterns: Shemya and the Semichi Islands. In: Corbett, D., West, D., Lefèvre, C. (Eds.), The People At the End of the World: The Western Aleutians Project and The Archaeology of Shemya Island. Aurora, Alaska Anthropological Association Monograph Series, Vol. 8. Alaska Anthropological Association, Anchorage, pp. 197207.Google Scholar
Coulthard, R.D., Furze, M.F.A., Pieńkowski, A.J., Nixon, F.C., England, J.H., 2010. New marine ΔR values for Arctic Canada. Quaternary Geochronology 5, 419434.Google Scholar
Coxe, W., 1780. Account of Russian Discoveries Between Asia and America. T. Cadell, London.Google Scholar
Crawford, M., West, D., 2012. Evolutionary consequences of human migration: genetic, historic and archaeological perspectives in the Caribbean and Aleutian Islands. In: Crawford, M., Campbell, B. (Eds.), The Causes and Consequences of Migration: An Evolutionary Perspective. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 6586.Google Scholar
Dall, W.H., 1877. On succession of shell-heaps of the Aleutian Islands. Contributions to North American Ethnology 1, 4191.Google Scholar
Davis, R., Rogers, J., Knecht, R., 2016. First maritime cultures of the Aleutians. In: Friesen, M., Mason, O. (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of the Prehistoric Arctic. Oxford University Press, New York, pp. 279302.Google Scholar
Davis, R.S., Knecht, R., 2010. Continuity and change in the eastern Aleutian archaeological sequence. Human Biology 82, 507524.Google Scholar
Dumond, D.E., Griffin, D.G., 2002. Measurements of the marine reservoir effect on radiocarbon ages in the Eastern Bering Sea. Arctic 55, 7786.Google Scholar
Fitzhugh, B., 2003. The Evolution of Complex Hunter-gatherers: Archaeological Evidence from the North Pacific. Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, New York.Google Scholar
Fitzhugh, B., Brown, W.A., 2018. Reservoir correction for the Central and North Kuril Islands in North Pacific context. Radiocarbon 60(2), 441–452.Google Scholar
Frolich, B., Laughlin, S.B., 2002. Unangan mortuary practices and the umqan burials on Anangula Island, Aleutian Islands, Alaska. In: B. Frolich, A.B. Harper, R. Gilberg (Eds.) To the Aleutians and Beyond: The Anthropology of William S. Laughlin. Department of Ethnography, the National Museum of Denmark, Copenhagen, pp. 89119.Google Scholar
Gordaoff, R., 2016. The House on the Hill: A 3800-year-old upland site on Adak Island, the Aleutian Islands, Alaska. Master’s thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Alaska, Anchorage.Google Scholar
Hatfield, V., 2010. Material culture across the Aleutian Archipelago. Human Biology 82, 525556.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 Four Mountains. Arctic Anthropology 53, 141159.Google Scholar
Hatfield, V., West, D., Bruner, K., Savinetsky, A., Krylovich, O., Vasyukov, D., Khasanov, 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
Heusser, C.J., 1990. Late Quaternary vegetation of the Aleutian Islands, southwestern Alaska. Canadian Journal of Botany 68, 13201326.Google Scholar
Holland, K., 1988. A 1,000-year Akun-Kodiak Interaction sphere. In: Shaw, R., Harritt, R., Dumond, D.E. (Eds.), The Late Prehistoric Development of Alaska’s Native People. Aurora, Alaska Anthropological Association Monograph Series, Vol. 4. Alaska Anthropological Association, Anchorage, pp. 307–317.Google Scholar
Holland, K., 2001. Regional interaction as seen from the eastern Aleutians. In: Dumond, D. (Ed.), Archaeology in the Aleut Zone of Alaska: Some Recent Research. University of Oregon Anthropological Papers, No. 58. Department of Anthropology and Museum of Natural History, University of Oregon, Eugene, pp. 173–182.Google Scholar
Holland, K., 2004. A brief note on the significance of prehistoric dogs from the eastern Aleutian Islands. Arctic Anthropology 41, 5054.Google Scholar
Hrdlička, A., 1945. The Aleutian and Commander Islands and Their Inhabitants. Wistar Institute of Anatomy and Biology, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Hunt, D., 2002. Aleutian remains at the Smithsonian Institution. In: Frohlich, B., Harper, A., Gilberg, R. (Eds.), To the Aleutians and Beyond: The Anthropology of William S. Laughlin. Publications of the National Museum, Ethnographical Series, Vol. 20. Department of Ethnography, National Museum of Denmark, Copenhagen, pp. 137–153.Google Scholar
InsideWood, 2004-onwards. InsideWood (accessed January 01, 2018). http://insidewood.lib.ncsu.edu/search.Google Scholar
Jochelson, W., 1925. Archaeological Investigations in the Aleutian Islands. Carnegie Institution of Washington Publication 367. Carnegie Institution of Washington, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Johnson, L.L., 2016. Wooden artifacts from Asxanna x cave, Islands of Four Mountains, Alaska. Arctic Anthropology 53, 114140.Google Scholar
Johnson, L.L., Wilmerding, E., 2001. Bringing the house down: modeling construction and deconstruction of Aleut semisubterranean houses. 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. 127–149.Google Scholar
Keenleyside, A., 2003. Changing patterns of health and disease among the Aleuts. Arctic Anthropology 40, 4869.Google Scholar
Khasanov, B.F., Nakamura, T., Okuno, M., Gorlova, E.N., Krylovich, O.A., West, D., Hatfield, V., Savinetsky, A.B., 2015. The marine radiocarbon reservoir effect on Adak Island (central Aleutian Islands), Alaska. Radiocarbon 57, 955964.Google Scholar
Knecht, R., Davis, R., 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, No. 58. University of Oregon Press, Eugene, pp. 269–288.Google Scholar
Krylovich, O.A., Vasyukov, D.D., Khasanov, B.F., Hatfield, V., West, D.L., Savinetsky, A.B., 2019. Hunter-gatherers subsistence and impact on fauna in the Islands of Four Mountains, Eastern Aleutians, Alaska, over three thousand years. Quaternary Research (this volume). https://doi.org/10.1017/qua.2018.127.Google Scholar
Laughlin, W.S., 1958. Neo-Aleut and Paleo-Aleut prehistory. In: Birket-Smith, K. (Ed.), Proceedings of the 32nd International Congress of Americanists, Copenhagen, pp. 516–530. Munksgaard, Copenhagen.Google Scholar
Laughlin, W.S., 1963a. The earliest Aleuts. Anthropological Papers of the University of Alaska 10, 7391.Google Scholar
Laughlin, W.S., 1963b. Eskimo and Aleuts: their origins and evolution. Science 142, 633645.Google Scholar
Laughlin, W.S., 1974. Holocene history of Nikolski Bay Alaska and Aleut evolution. Folk. Dansk Ethnografisk Tidsskrift 16–17, 95115.Google Scholar
Laughlin, W.S. 1975. Aleuts, ecosystem, Holocene, history, and Siberian origins. Science 189, 507515.Google Scholar
Laughlin, W.S. 1980. Aleuts: Survivors of the Bering Land Bridge. Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, New York.Google Scholar
Laughlin, W.S., Marsh, G.H., 1951. A new view of the history of the Aleutians. Arctic 4, 7588.Google Scholar
Mangerud, J., Bondevik, S., Gulliksen, S., Hufthammer, A.K., Høisæter, T., 2006. Marine 14C reservoir ages for 19th century whales and molluscs from the North Atlantic. Quaternary Science Reviews 25, 32283245.Google Scholar
Maschner, H., Reedy-Maschner, K., 1998. Raid, retreat, defend (repeat): the archaeology and ethnohistory of warfare on the North Pacific rim. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 17, 1951.Google Scholar
McCartney, A., Veltre, D., 2002. Longhouses of the eastern Aleutian Islands, Alaska. In: Frohlich, B., Harper, A., Gilberg, R. (Eds.), To the Aleutians and Beyond: The Anthropology of William S. Laughlin. Publications of the National Museum, Ethnographical Series, Vol. 20. Department of Ethnography, The National Museum of Denmark, Copenhagen, pp. 249–265.Google Scholar
McNeely, R., Dyke, A.S., Southon, J.R., 2006. Canadian marine reservoir ages, preliminary data assessment. Geological Survey of Canada, Open File 5049. http://dx.doi.org/10.13140/2.1.1461.6649.Google Scholar
Merriwether, D., Rothhammer, F., Ferrell, R., 1995. Distribution of the four founding lineage haplotypes in Native Americans suggests a single wave of migration for the New World. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 98, 411430.Google Scholar
Misarti, N., Maschner, H., 2015. The Paleo-Aleut to Neo-Aleut transition revisited. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 37, 6784.Google Scholar
O’Leary, M., 1993a. Report of Investigation for the Aleut Corporation BLM AA-12206 (Site CG-2). BIA ANCSA Office for the Aleut Corporation. Report on file Bureau of Indian Affairs Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act Office, Anchorage.Google Scholar
O’Leary, M., 1993b. Report of investigation for the Aleut Corporation BLM AA-12210 (Site UL-1). BIA ANCSA Office for the Aleut Corporation. Report on file Bureau of Indian Affairs Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act Office, Anchorage.Google Scholar
O’Leary, M., 1993c. Report of investigation for BLM AA-12208 (CG-4). BIA ANCSA Office for the Aleut Corporation. Report on file Bureau of Indian Affairs ANCSA Office, Anchorage.Google Scholar
O’Leary, M., 2001. Volcanic ash stratigraphy for Adak Island, Central Aleutian Archipelago. 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. 215–234.Google Scholar
Oeschger, H., Siegenthaler, U., Schotterer, U., Gugelmann, A., 1975. A box diffusion model to study the carbon dioxide exchange in nature. Tellus 27, 168192.Google Scholar
R Core Team, 2015. R: A language and environment for statistical computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria. https://www.R-project.org/.Google Scholar
Raff, J., Tackney, J., O’Rourke, D., 2010. South from Alaska: a pilot aDNA study of genetic history on the Alaska Peninsula and the eastern Aleutians. Human Biology 82, 677693.Google Scholar
Reimer, P.J., Baillie, M., Baird, E., et al., 2004. IntCal04 terrestrial radiocarbon age calibration, 0–26 kyr BP. Radiocarbon 46, 10291058.Google Scholar
Robinson, S.W., Thompson, G., 1981. Radiocarbon corrections for marine shell dates with application to southern Pacific Northwest Coast prehistory. Syesis 14, 4557.Google Scholar
Rubicz, R., 2001. Origins of the Aleuts: Molecular perspectives. Master’s Thesis, University of Kansas, Lawrence.Google Scholar
Savinetsky, A.B., West, D., Antipushina, Z., Khasanov, B., Kiseleva, N.K., Krylovich, O.A., and Pereladov, A.M., 2012. The reconstruction of ecosystems 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. 75–106.Google Scholar
Savinetsky, A.B., Khasanov, 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
Schurr, T., Wallace, D., 1999. mtDNA variations in Native Americans and Siberians and its implications for the peopling of the New World. In: Bonnichsen, R. (Ed.), Who Were the First Americans? Proceedings of the 58th Annual Biology Colloquium, Oregon State University, Corvallis. PUBLISHER, CITY, pp. 4177.Google Scholar
Smith, S.E., Hayes, M.G., Cabana, G.S., Huff, C., Coltrain, J.B., O’Rourke, D.H., 2009. Inferring population continuity versus replacement with aDNA: a cautionary tale from the Aleutian Islands. Human Biology 81, 407426.Google Scholar
Stuckenrath, R., Mielke, J.E., 1973. Smithsonian Institution radiocarbon measurements VIII. Radiocarbon 15, 388424.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
Swanson, H., 1982. The unknown islands. Cuttlefish, Unalaska City School, Unalaska, Alaska.Google Scholar
Turck, T., 1992. Report of investigation for Site KG-6 (BLM AA-12217). BIA ANCSA Office for the Aleut Corporation. Report on file Bureau of Indian Affairs Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act Office, Anchorage.Google Scholar
Vasyukov, D., Krylovich, O., West, D., Hatfield, V., Savinetsky, A., 2019. Ancient canids of the Aleutian Islands (new archaeological discoveries from the Islands of Four Mountains). Quaternary Research (this volume).Google Scholar
Veltre, D., McCartney, A., 2001. Ethnohistorical archaeology at the Reese Bay Site, Unalaska Island. 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. 87–104.Google Scholar
Veniaminov, I., 1984. Notes on the Islands of the Unalashka District Pierce, R.A. (Ed.). Limestone Press, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.Google Scholar
West, D., Crawford, M., Savinetsky, A.B., 2007. Genetics, prehistory and the colonisation of the Aleutian Islands. Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 98, 4757.Google Scholar
West, D., Lefèvre, C., Corbett, D., Savinetsky, A., 1999. Radiocarbon dates for the Near Islands, Aleutian Islands, Alaska. Current Research in the Pleistocene 16, 8385.Google Scholar
West, D., Lefèvre, C., Corbett, D., Crockford, S., 2003. A burial cave in the western Aleutian Islands. Arctic Anthropology 40, 7086.Google Scholar
Wheeler, E.A., 2011. InsideWood - a web resource for hardwood anatomy. IAWA Journal 32, 199211.Google Scholar
Supplementary material: File

West et al. supplementary material

Table S1

Download West et al. supplementary material(File)
File 30.4 KB