Maritime Hunter-Gatherer Population Dynamics

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Maritime Hunter- Gatherer Population Dynamics Movement along the Southern Beringia Coast and Beyond, 13,000 to 8,000 yr BP

description

Maritime Hunter-Gatherer Population Dynamics. Movement along the Southern Beringia Coast and Beyond, 13,000 to 8,000 yr BP. Climates of the last 11,000 years. 21 Kyr. 14 Kyr. 11 Kyr. 8 Kyr. William Laughlin’s View of New World Migrations. Land Route to North America. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Maritime Hunter-Gatherer Population Dynamics

Page 1: Maritime Hunter-Gatherer Population Dynamics

Maritime Hunter-GathererPopulation Dynamics

Movement along the Southern Beringia Coast and Beyond, 13,000 to 8,000 yr

BP

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Climates of the last 11,000 years

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21 Kyr

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14 Kyr

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11 Kyr

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8 Kyr

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William Laughlin’s View of New World Migrations

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Land Route to

North America

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Clovis on Great Plains ca 11,500 B.P.

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Coastal routeCoastal Route

13,000 B.P.?

Monte Verde

12,500 B.P.

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Hunting and Gathering Demographic Characteristics

• Band Size ~ 25 – 50 individuals

• Deme (a.k.a. breeding population) – ~ 175 – 475 individuals

• Incest prohibitions, uneven sex ratios

• Polygyny

• Density < .01/sq km

• Growth rates .5% - 2%/year

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Todd A. Surovell 2003

“Simulating Coastal Migration in New World Colonization”

Current Anthropology

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• Simulation set up– 77 cells arranged 200 km long linearly arranged along coast– Parameters

• Cell width• Maximum population growth rate• Leapfrog distance

• Coastal return rate• Inland return rate

– Goal : Get populations to Monte Verde before they move far inland

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Simulation Structure

• A. Coastal migration into unoccupied cells occurs when the number of individuals exceeding the optimum can improve their return rates by moving into unoccupied territory. Inland migration occurs when coastal returns fall below maximum inland returns.

• B. Population density versus status accepting or rejecting immigrants. Coastal migration between occupied cells occurs when an individual can improve returns by joining another population and that population can improve return rates by having an individual join, a condition met only when population densities for the destination cells are below the optimum.

• C. The "base model" structure and parameter settings.

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Simulation Results

• Goal (almost) achieved by settings:– Cell width 50 km– Leapfrog distance 1000 km– Optimal coastal pop density = 0.0033/sq km– Coastal return rates set to 36x Inland rates.– Growth rate 0.5%

• Not so realistic!

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David Anderson and J. Christopher Gillam 2000

“Paleoindian Colonization of the Americas”

American Antiquity

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Anderson & Gillam’s Model

• Least Cost – Hunting and Gathering colonists will move along the path with the least slope

• Digital Elevation Model (DEM) elevation/sq km

• 3 x 3 km grid placed at starting point• ArcInfo used to find a least cost movement

path. (a spreading operation acting on a roughness layer.

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~5000 years

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~1000 years

But would the isolated groups be viable?

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William Laughlin’s View of New World Migrations

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Thule eastward expansion 1000 – 1200 C.E.

Independence Fjord

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3200 BP

8000 BP

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