Brown Tony, Rijal Dilli P, Heintzman Peter D, Clarke Charlotte L, Blankholm Hans-Peter, Høeg Helge I, Lammers Youri, Bråthen Kari Anne, Edwards Mary, Alsos Inger G
The Arctic University Museum of Norway, UiT, The Arctic University of Norway, N-9037 Tromsø, Norway.
The Palaeolab., Geography and Environmental Science, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, UK.
PNAS Nexus. 2022 Oct 7;1(5):pgac209. doi: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac209. eCollection 2022 Nov.
Population size has increasingly been taken as the driver of past human environmental impact worldwide, and particularly in the Arctic. However, sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA), pollen and archaeological data show that over the last 12,000 years, paleoeconomy and culture determined human impacts on the terrestrial ecology of Arctic Norway. The large Mortensnes site complex (Ceavccageađgi, 70°N) has yielded the most comprehensive multiproxy record in the Arctic to date. The site saw occupation from the Pioneer period (c. 10,000 cal. years BP) with more intensive use from c. 4,200 to 2,000 cal. years BP and after 1,600 cal. years BP. Here, we combine on-site environmental archaeology with a near-site lake record of plant and animal sedaDNA. The rich animal sedaDNA data (42 taxa) and on-site faunal analyses reveal switches in human dietary composition from early-Holocene fish + marine mammals, to mixed marine + reindeer, then finally to marine + reindeer + domesticates (sheep, cattle, pigs), with highest reindeer concentrations in the last millennium. Archaeological evidence suggests these changes are not directly driven by climate or variation in population densities at the site or in the region, but rather are the result of changing socio-economic activities and culture, probably reflecting settlers' origins. This large settlement only had discernable effects on its hinterland in the last 3,600 years (grazing) and more markedly in the last 1,000 years through reindeer keeping/herding and, possibly domestic stock. Near-site sedaDNA can be linked to and validate the faunal record from archaeological excavations, demonstrating that environmental impacts can be assessed at a landscape scale.
人口规模越来越被视为全球过去人类环境影响的驱动因素,在北极地区尤为如此。然而,沉积古DNA(sedaDNA)、花粉和考古数据表明,在过去12000年里,古经济和文化决定了人类对挪威北极地区陆地生态的影响。大型莫滕斯内斯遗址群(Ceavccageađgi,北纬70°)迄今为止提供了北极地区最全面的多指标记录。该遗址自先锋时期(约公元前10000年)就有人居住,约公元前4200年至2000年以及公元前1600年后使用更为密集。在这里,我们将现场环境考古学与附近湖泊的动植物sedaDNA记录相结合。丰富的动物sedaDNA数据(42个分类单元)和现场动物分析揭示了人类饮食结构的转变,从全新世早期的鱼类+海洋哺乳动物,到海洋+驯鹿混合,最后到海洋+驯鹿+家畜(绵羊、牛、猪),在过去一千年里驯鹿的集中度最高。考古证据表明,这些变化并非直接由该遗址或该地区的气候或人口密度变化驱动,而是社会经济活动和文化变化的结果,可能反映了定居者的起源。这个大型定居点直到过去3600年才对其腹地产生明显影响(放牧),在过去1000年里通过驯鹿饲养/放牧以及可能的家畜饲养产生了更显著的影响。附近的sedaDNA可以与考古发掘的动物记录相联系并验证,表明可以在景观尺度上评估环境影响。