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Evaluating Prehistoric Sea Ice Variability and Culture Change in Northwest Alaska Adam Freeburg University of Washington Seattle, USA

Adam Freeburg University of Washington Seattle, USA

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Page 1: Adam Freeburg University of Washington Seattle, USA

Evaluating Prehistoric Sea Ice Variability and Culture Change in Northwest Alaska

Adam FreeburgUniversity of Washington

Seattle, USA

Page 2: Adam Freeburg University of Washington Seattle, USA
Page 3: Adam Freeburg University of Washington Seattle, USA

Archaeology provides...• Long term perspective

• Interdisciplinarity

• Human aspect

Page 4: Adam Freeburg University of Washington Seattle, USA

Ort

ho

ph

oto

Ma

nle

y e

t a

l. 2

00

7

Page 5: Adam Freeburg University of Washington Seattle, USA

Ice as medium for...• Subsistence

• Transportation

• Living

http://vilda.alaska.edu

Page 6: Adam Freeburg University of Washington Seattle, USA

Ice as part of...• Subsistence Change

• Culture change

• Social Upheaval

Reconstructing the “icescape”http://vilda.alaska.edu

Page 7: Adam Freeburg University of Washington Seattle, USA

Paleo- proxies in NW Alaska• Tree rings• Pollen• Beach ridges• Archaeological fauna

Page 8: Adam Freeburg University of Washington Seattle, USA

Ringed Seal- Natchiq

(Phoca hispida)

• Prefers fast ice• Sub-nivean lairs for birthing,

nursing• Shorter ice duration can

have impact on pup health, survival

Bearded Seal- Ugruk

(Erignathus barbatus)

• Prefers pack ice• Birthing, nursing on floes• Available only when pack

ice is accessible from land (spring or autumn)

Phot

os: N

ation

al G

eogr

aphi

c

Fauna as Ice Proxy

Page 9: Adam Freeburg University of Washington Seattle, USA

Fauna as Ice Proxy

Phocid Seal86%

Bearded Seal11%

Bird3%

Other<1%

Ipiutak A.D. 450-650

Caribou33%

Phocid Seal42%

Bearded Seal

9%

Bird5%

Beluga2%

Other9%

Thule A.D. 1000-1200

Page 10: Adam Freeburg University of Washington Seattle, USA

Fauna as Ice Proxy• Ringed:Bearded seal ratio change

• Variability of ice extent/duration

• Chronological resolution on human scale

Page 11: Adam Freeburg University of Washington Seattle, USA

Ipiutak(A.D. 450)

Thule(A.D. 1000)

Kotzebue(A.D. 1400)

Page 12: Adam Freeburg University of Washington Seattle, USA

Ringed seal isotopes (Strathe 2007)

• Increase in δ15N: widening diet

• Decrease in δ13C: declining productivity

• Productivity tied to timing, extent of sea ice

Page 13: Adam Freeburg University of Washington Seattle, USA

Summary• Archaeological fauna as paleo-ice proxy

• Provide long term info on human scale and dimension

• Test hypotheses of cultural interaction

• Lessons of adaptation and resiliency- challenges and possibilities

Page 14: Adam Freeburg University of Washington Seattle, USA

Acknowledgements• NRF: Young Researcher Fellowship

• NPS: Alaska Regional Office and Western Arctic Parklands staff

• UW: Ben Fitzhugh, Shelby Anderson, 2008-2010 crews, and CAKR Lab students

• Herbert Foster, Krusenstern community, and Native Village of Kotzebue

Page 15: Adam Freeburg University of Washington Seattle, USA