Widespread population decline in South America correlates with mid-Holocene climate change

被引:0
|
作者
Philip Riris
Manuel Arroyo-Kalin
机构
[1] UCL Institute of Archaeology,
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Quantifying the impacts of climate change on prehistoric demography is crucial for understanding the adaptive pathways taken by human populations. Archaeologists across South America have pointed to patterns of regional abandonment during the Middle Holocene (8200 to 4200 cal BP) as evidence of sensitivity to shifts in hydroclimate over this period. We develop a unified approach to investigate demography and climate in South America and aim to clarify the extent to which evidence of local anthropic responses can be generalised to large-scale trends. We achieve this by integrating archaeological radiocarbon data and palaeoclimatic time series to show that population decline occurred coeval with the transition to the initial mid-Holocene across South America. Through the analysis of radiocarbon dates with Monte Carlo methods, we find multiple, sustained phases of downturn associated to periods of high climatic variability. A likely driver of the duration and severity of demographic turnover is the frequency of exceptional climatic events, rather than the absolute magnitude of change. Unpredictable levels of tropical precipitation had sustained negative impacts on pre-Columbian populations lasting until at least 6000 cal BP, after which recovery is evident. Our results support the inference that a demographic regime shift in the second half of the Middle Holocene were coeval with cultural practices surrounding Neotropical plant management and early cultivation, possibly acting as buffers when the wild resource base was in flux.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Mid-Holocene climate change in Europe: a data-model comparison
    Brewer, S.
    Guiot, J.
    Torre, F.
    CLIMATE OF THE PAST, 2007, 3 (03) : 499 - 512
  • [22] Mid-Holocene climate change in North China, and the effect on cultural development
    Jin, GY
    Liu, DS
    CHINESE SCIENCE BULLETIN, 2002, 47 (05): : 408 - 413
  • [23] Comparison of a recent elm decline with the mid-Holocene Elm Decline
    Flynn, Laura E.
    Mitchell, Fraser J. G.
    VEGETATION HISTORY AND ARCHAEOBOTANY, 2019, 28 (04) : 391 - 398
  • [24] Mechanisms of Mid-Holocene Precipitation Change in the South Pacific Convergence Zone
    Mantsis, Damianos F.
    Lintner, Benjamin R.
    Broccoli, Anthony J.
    Khodri, Myriam
    JOURNAL OF CLIMATE, 2013, 26 (18) : 6937 - 6953
  • [25] Mid-Holocene hemlock decline in eastern North America linked with phytophagous insect activity
    Bhiry, N
    Filion, L
    QUATERNARY RESEARCH, 1996, 45 (03) : 312 - 320
  • [26] Determining the age of the mid-Holocene Tsuga canadensis (hemlock) decline, eastern North America
    Bennett, KD
    Fuller, JL
    HOLOCENE, 2002, 12 (04): : 421 - 429
  • [27] Mid-Holocene climate in the south-central Andes: Humid or dry? Response
    Quade, J
    Rech, J
    Betancourt, J
    Latorre, C
    SCIENCE, 2001, 292 (5526) : U1 - U3
  • [28] A review of the mid-Holocene elm decline in the British Isles
    Parker, AG
    Goudie, AS
    Anderson, DE
    Robinson, MA
    Bonsall, C
    PROGRESS IN PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY, 2002, 26 (01) : 1 - 45
  • [29] Late Pleistocene and mid-Holocene climate change derived from a Florida speleothem
    van Beynen, Philip
    Polk, Jason S.
    Asmerom, Yemane
    Polyak, Victor
    QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL, 2017, 449 : 75 - 82
  • [30] Hydrologic response of the Crow Wing Watershed, Minnesota, to mid-Holocene climate change
    Person, Mark
    Roy, Prasenjit
    Wright, Herb
    Gutowski, William, Jr.
    Ito, Emi
    Winter, Tom
    Rosenberry, Donald
    Cohen, Denis
    GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA BULLETIN, 2007, 119 (3-4) : 363 - 376