Lawn Lake, a high montane hunting camp in the Colorado (USA) rocky mountains: Insights into early Holocene Late Paleoindian hunter-gatherer adaptations and paleo-landscapes
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引用次数: 4
Abstract
The Lawn Lake site is a stratified hunting camp situated on a glacial lake outlet river terrace in Rocky Mountain National Park’s upper subalpine forest zone. Its archaeological assemblage represents 9,000 years of hunter-gatherer use as a summer game and plant processing camp for subalpine forest and nearby alpine tundra resource areas. This article’s focus is on the site’s earliest camp levels which contain artifacts and AMS radiocarbon dated hearth charcoal between 8,900 and 7,900 cal yr BP, placing them among the region’s earliest high montane (3,353 m ASL) Paleoindian hunting camps, once part of a network of such sites designed to support systematic high altitude procurement of summer migratory game animals and plant foods in Southern Rocky Mountain subalpine forest and tundra ecosystems. Lawn Lake paleoclimate and paleoecology studies produced long-term pollen records and climate-proxy sediment data for modeling the site’s prehistoric climate and ecology history, useful for interpreting its high-altitude Late Paleoindian hunter-gatherer adaptations.
Lawn Lake场地是一个分层狩猎营地,位于落基山国家公园上亚高山森林地带的冰川湖出水口阶地上。它的考古组合代表了9000年的狩猎采集者作为亚高山森林和附近高山苔原资源区的夏季狩猎和植物加工营地。本文的重点是该遗址最早的营地水平,其中包含8,900至7,900 cal - yr BP之间的人工制品和AMS放射性碳测定的炉底木炭,将它们置于该地区最早的高海拔(海拔3,353米)古印第安人狩猎营地中,曾经是此类站点网络的一部分,旨在支持在南落基山亚高山森林和苔原生态系统中系统地高海拔采购夏季迁徙动物和植物食物。Lawn Lake古气候和古生态研究产生了长期的花粉记录和气候代用沉积物数据,用于模拟该遗址的史前气候和生态历史,有助于解释其高海拔晚期古印第安人的狩猎采集适应性。
期刊介绍:
Published quarterly, this is the only general journal dedicated solely to North America—with total coverage of archaeological activity in the United States, Canada, and Northern Mexico (excluding Mesoamerica). The North American Archaeologist surveys all aspects of prehistoric and historic archaeology within an evolutionary perspective, from Paleo-Indian studies to industrial sites. It accents the results of Resource Management and Contract Archaeology, the newest growth areas in archaeology, often neglected in other publications. The Journal regularly and reliably publishes work based on activities in state, provincial and local archaeological societies.