Choy Kyungcheol, Potter Ben A, McKinney Holly J, Reuther Joshua D, Wang Shiway W, Wooller Matthew J
Water and Environmental Research Center, Institute of Northern Engineering, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK 99775; Alaska Stable Isotope Facility, School of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK 99775;
Department of Anthropology, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK 99775;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Aug 30;113(35):9757-62. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1606219113.
Current approaches to reconstruct subsistence and dietary trends in ancient hunter-gatherer societies include stable isotope analyses, but these have focused on human remains, cooking pottery, and food residues, which are relatively rare in the archaeological record. In contrast, short-term hearths are more ubiquitous worldwide, and these features can provide valuable evidence for ancient subsistence practices, particularly when faunal remains are not preserved. To test the suitability of hearths for this purpose, we conducted multiple chemical analyses: stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analyses of total organic matter (expressed as δ(13)C and δ(15)N values) and compound-specific carbon isotope analyses of individual fatty acids (δ(13)C16:0 and δ(13)C18:0) from 17 well-preserved hearths present in three occupations dating between ∼13,200-11,500 calibrated years B.P. at the Upward Sun River (USR) site in central Alaska. We combined δ(15)N and δ(13)CFA data in a Bayesian mixing model (stable isotope analysis in R) with concentration dependency to each hearth. Our model values were tested against faunal indices, indicating a strong positive relationship between marine proportional contributions to each hearth and salmon abundance. Results of the models show substantial anadromous salmon use in multiple USR components, indicating recurrent use of the site for salmon processing during the terminal Pleistocene. Our results demonstrate that salmonid and freshwater resources were more important for late Pleistocene hunter-gatherers than previously thought and highlight the potential of chemical profiling of hearth organic residues for providing greater geographic and temporal insights into resource use by prepottery societies.
目前重建古代狩猎采集社会生计和饮食趋势的方法包括稳定同位素分析,但这些分析主要集中在人类遗骸、烹饪陶器和食物残渣上,而这些在考古记录中相对较少。相比之下,短期炉灶在全球更为普遍,这些特征可以为古代生计方式提供有价值的证据,特别是在动物遗骸未保存下来的情况下。为了测试炉灶是否适合用于此目的,我们进行了多项化学分析:对总有机质进行稳定碳和氮同位素分析(以δ(13)C和δ(15)N值表示),以及对来自阿拉斯加中部向上太阳河(USR)遗址的17个保存完好的炉灶中的单个脂肪酸(δ(13)C16:0和δ(13)C18:0)进行化合物特异性碳同位素分析,这些炉灶存在于约公元前13200 - 11500年校准年的三次居住时期。我们将δ(15)N和δ(13)CFA数据结合到一个贝叶斯混合模型(R中的稳定同位素分析)中,并考虑每个炉灶的浓度依赖性。我们将模型值与动物指标进行了对比,结果表明每个炉灶中海洋成分的比例贡献与鲑鱼丰度之间存在很强的正相关关系。模型结果显示,在USR的多个部分大量使用了溯河产卵的鲑鱼,这表明在末次更新世末期该遗址经常被用于鲑鱼加工。我们的结果表明鲑鱼和淡水资源对晚更新世狩猎采集者来说比以前认为的更重要,并强调了炉灶有机残留物化学分析在为陶器时代前社会的资源利用提供更深入的地理和时间洞察方面的潜力。