Author:
Chaput Michelle A.,Kriesche Björn,Betts Matthew,Martindale Andrew,Kulik Rafal,Schmidt Volker,Gajewski Konrad
Abstract
As the Cordilleran and Laurentide Ice Sheets retreated, North America was colonized by human populations; however, the spatial patterns of subsequent population growth are unclear. Temporal frequency distributions of aggregated radiocarbon (14C) dates are used as a proxy of population size and can be used to track this expansion. The Canadian Archaeological Radiocarbon Database contains more than 35,000 14C dates and is used in this study to map the spatiotemporal demographic changes of Holocene populations in North America at a continental scale for the past 13,000 y. We use the kernel method, which converts the spatial distribution of 14C dates into estimates of population density at 500-y intervals. The resulting maps reveal temporally distinct, dynamic patterns associated with paleodemographic trends that correspond well to genetic, archaeological, and ethnohistoric evidence of human occupation. These results have implications for hypothesizing and testing migration routes into and across North America as well as the relative influence of North American populations on the evolution of the North American ecosystem.
Funder
German Academic Exchange Service
Gouvernement du Canada | Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Ontario Graduate Scholarship
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
46 articles.
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