Department of Anthropology, University of Oklahoma, 455 W. Lindsey St., Norman, OK, 73019, USA.
Center for Conservation Genomics, Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, National Zoological Park, MRC 5513, Washington, DC, 20013-7012, USA.
Sci Rep. 2018 Jul 3;8(1):10014. doi: 10.1038/s41598-018-28224-0.
The submersion of Late Pleistocene shorelines and poor organic preservation at many early archaeological sites obscure the earliest effects of humans on coastal resources in the Americas. We used collagen fingerprinting to identify bone fragments from middens at four California Channel Island sites that are among the oldest coastal sites in the Americas (~12,500-8,500 cal BP). We document Paleocoastal human predation of at least three marine mammal families/species, including northern elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris), eared seals (Otariidae), and sea otters (Enhydra lutris). Otariids and elephant seals are abundant today along the Pacific Coast of North America, but elephant seals are rare in late Holocene (<1500 cal BP) archaeological sites. Our data support the hypotheses that: (1) marine mammals helped fuel the peopling of the Americas; (2) humans affected marine mammal biogeography millennia before the devastation caused by the historic fur and oil trade; and (3) the current abundance and distribution of recovering pinniped populations on the California Channel Islands may mirror a pre-human baseline.
末次冰期海岸线的淹没和许多早期考古遗址中较差的有机保存,使得人们难以了解人类对美洲沿海资源的最早影响。我们使用胶原指纹图谱鉴定了来自加利福尼亚海峡群岛四个遗址垃圾场中的骨片,这些遗址是美洲最早的沿海遗址之一(约 12500-8500 年前)。我们记录了古沿海人类对至少三种海洋哺乳动物科/种的捕食,包括北象海豹(Mirounga angustirostris)、有耳海豹(Otariidae)和海獭(Enhydra lutris)。今天,北美的太平洋沿岸有大量的Otariidae 和象海豹,但在全新世晚期(<1500 年前)的考古遗址中,象海豹很少见。我们的数据支持以下假设:(1)海洋哺乳动物帮助推动了美洲的人类迁徙;(2)人类在历史上的皮毛和石油贸易造成的破坏之前,就已经影响了海洋哺乳动物的生物地理学;(3)加利福尼亚海峡群岛上恢复的鳍足类种群的当前丰度和分布可能反映了人类之前的基线。