Department of Archaeology, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada.
McMaster Ancient DNA Centre, Department of Anthropology, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
PLoS One. 2019 Jan 7;14(1):e0210187. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0210187. eCollection 2019.
Archaeological research on the Canadian island of Newfoundland increasingly demonstrates that the island's subarctic climate and paucity of terrestrial food resources did not restrict past Pre-Inuit (Dorset) and Native American (Beothuk) hunter-gatherer populations to a single subsistence pattern. This study first sought to characterize hunter-gatherer diets over the past 1500 years; and second, to assess the impact of European colonization on Beothuk lifeways by comparing the bone chemistry of Beothuk skeletal remains before and after the intensification of European settlement in the early 18th century. We employed radiocarbon dating and stable carbon and nitrogen isotope ratio analysis of bulk bone collagen from both Dorset (n = 9) and Beothuk (n = 13) cultures, including a naturally mummified 17th century Beothuk individual. Carbon and nitrogen isotope analysis of 108 faunal samples from Dorset and Beothuk archaeological sites around the island were used as a dietary baseline for the humans. We combined our results with previously published isotope data and radiocarbon dates from Dorset (n = 12) and Beothuk (n = 18) individuals and conducted a palaeodietary analysis using Bayesian modelling, cluster analysis and comparative statistical tests. Dorset diets featured more marine protein than those of the Beothuk, and the diets of Beothuk after the 18th century featured less high trophic level marine protein than those of individuals predating the 18th century. Despite inhabiting the same island, Dorset and Beothuk cultures employed markedly different dietary strategies, consistent with interpretations of other archaeological data. Significantly, European colonization had a profound effect on Beothuk lifeways, as in response to the increasing European presence on the coast, the Beothuk relied more extensively on the limited resources of the island's boreal forests and rivers.
纽芬兰岛的考古研究越来越多地表明,该岛的亚北极气候和陆地食物资源匮乏并没有将过去的前因纽特人(多塞特人)和美洲原住民(贝奥图克人)狩猎采集者限制在单一的生存模式中。本研究首先试图描述过去 1500 年中狩猎采集者的饮食;其次,通过比较 18 世纪初欧洲殖民化前和后贝奥图克骨骼遗骸的骨化学特征,评估欧洲殖民化对贝奥图克生活方式的影响。我们采用放射性碳测年法和稳定的碳和氮同位素比值分析方法,对来自多塞特(n=9)和贝奥图克(n=13)文化的大块骨胶原进行了分析,其中包括一个自然木乃伊化的 17 世纪贝奥图克个体。对来自该岛周围多塞特和贝奥图克考古遗址的 108 个动物样本的碳和氮同位素分析,作为人类的饮食基线。我们将我们的结果与以前发表的多塞特(n=12)和贝奥图克(n=18)个体的同位素数据和放射性碳年代数据相结合,并使用贝叶斯建模、聚类分析和比较统计检验进行了古饮食分析。多塞特人的饮食中含有更多的海洋蛋白质,而贝奥图克人的饮食在 18 世纪后则含有较少的高营养级海洋蛋白质,而 18 世纪前的个体则含有更多的高营养级海洋蛋白质。尽管居住在同一个岛上,但多塞特和贝奥图克文化采用了明显不同的饮食策略,这与其他考古数据的解释一致。值得注意的是,欧洲殖民化对贝奥图克的生活方式产生了深远的影响,因为随着欧洲人在海岸上的不断增加,贝奥图克人越来越依赖于岛上的北方森林和河流的有限资源。