Collagen Fingerprinting and the Earliest Marine Mammal Hunting in North America

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作者
Courtney A. Hofman
Torben C. Rick
Jon M. Erlandson
Leslie Reeder-Myers
Andreanna J. Welch
Michael Buckley
机构
[1] University of Oklahoma,Department of Anthropology
[2] 455 W. Lindsey St.,Center for Conservation Genomics, Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute
[3] National Zoological Park,Department of Anthropology, National Museum of Natural History
[4] MRC 5513,Museum of Natural and Cultural History
[5] MRC 112,Department of Anthropology
[6] Smithsonian Institution,Department of Biosciences
[7] University of Oregon,School and Earth and Environmental Sciences
[8] Temple University,undefined
[9] Durham University,undefined
[10] South Road,undefined
[11] Manchester Institute of Biotechnology,undefined
[12] 131 Princess Street,undefined
[13] University of Manchester,undefined
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摘要
The submersion of Late Pleistocene shorelines and poor organic preservation at many early archaeological sites obscure the earliest effects of humans on coastal resources in the Americas. We used collagen fingerprinting to identify bone fragments from middens at four California Channel Island sites that are among the oldest coastal sites in the Americas (~12,500-8,500 cal BP). We document Paleocoastal human predation of at least three marine mammal families/species, including northern elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris), eared seals (Otariidae), and sea otters (Enhydra lutris). Otariids and elephant seals are abundant today along the Pacific Coast of North America, but elephant seals are rare in late Holocene (<1500 cal BP) archaeological sites. Our data support the hypotheses that: (1) marine mammals helped fuel the peopling of the Americas; (2) humans affected marine mammal biogeography millennia before the devastation caused by the historic fur and oil trade; and (3) the current abundance and distribution of recovering pinniped populations on the California Channel Islands may mirror a pre-human baseline.
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