| Literature DB >> 29410869 |
Lars Pilø1, Espen Finstad1, Christopher Bronk Ramsey2, Julian Robert Post Martinsen3, Atle Nesje4, Brit Solli3, Vivian Wangen3, Martin Callanan5, James H Barrett6.
Abstract
The melting of perennial ice patches globally is uncovering a fragile record of alpine activity, especially hunting and the use of mountain passes. When rescued by systematic fieldwork (glacial archaeology), this evidence opens an unprecedented window on the chronology of high-elevation activity. Recent research in Jotunheimen and surrounding mountain areas of Norway has recovered over 2000 finds-many associated with reindeer hunting (e.g. arrows). We report the radiocarbon dates of 153 objects and use a kernel density estimation (KDE) method to determine the distribution of dated events from ca 4000 BCE to the present. Interpreted in light of shifting environmental, preservation and socio-economic factors, these new data show counterintuitive trends in the intensity of reindeer hunting and other high-elevation activity. Cold temperatures may sometimes have kept humans from Norway's highest elevations, as expected based on accessibility, exposure and reindeer distributions. In times of increasing demand for mountain resources, however, activity probably continued in the face of adverse or variable climatic conditions. The use of KDE modelling makes it possible to observe this patterning without the spurious effects of noise introduced by the discrete nature of the finds and the radiocarbon calibration process.Entities:
Keywords: alpine travel; climate change; economic intensification; glacial archaeology; historical ecology; reindeer hunting
Year: 2018 PMID: 29410869 PMCID: PMC5792946 DOI: 10.1098/rsos.171738
Source DB: PubMed Journal: R Soc Open Sci ISSN: 2054-5703 Impact factor: 2.963
Figure 1.The melting of perennial ice patches in Oppland, Norway, is yielding numerous organic artefacts. (a) Distribution map of archaeological sites at glaciers and ice patches in Oppland. Ice patches mentioned in text: 1, Storfonne; 2, Langfonne; 3, Åndfonne; 4, Lendbreen. (b) A 2014 aerial photograph of the Storfonne ice patch, from the south. The light coloured areas (lichen free zones) have recently been exposed by the melting ice patch. (c) A 92 cm arrow shaft (C59804/41) from the Langfonne ice patch, dated to 2031–1879 BCE (UBA-29712, calibrated at 95% probability). (d) An 88 cm arrow (C57838/14(249)) from the Åndfonne ice patch, with iron arrowhead, sinew, and wooden shaft, dated to 695–891 CE (Beta-320917, calibrated at 95% probability).
Figure 2.Long-term climate fluctuations and the chronological distribution of ice-patch finds from Oppland, Norway. (a) The mean kernel density model distributions of radiocarbon dates on artefacts from ice patches in Oppland that are associated with hunting. Objects at high risk of an old wood effect, making them appear older than the date of deposition, have been plotted separately. (b) The mean kernel density model distributions of radiocarbon dates on all artefacts from ice patches in Oppland. Objects at high risk of an old wood effect, making them appear older than the date of deposition, have been plotted separately. (c) Estimated July temperature (°C) in northern Fennoscandia based on tree-ring width data [32,37]. The x- and y-axes intersect at mean temperature between 4500 BCE and 2000 CE. (d) Relative glacier size in the Smørstabbtindan massif, Jotunheimen, between 4500 BCE and 1950 [38]. The x- and y-axes intersect at modern glacier size.