Affiliation:
1. Department of Archaeology and Anthropology,University of SaskatchewanArchaeology Building, 55 Campus Drive, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan,Canada,S7N 5B1 (e-mail: liz.robertson@usask.ca)
Abstract
AbstractPalaeoenvironmental records from the Northern Plains of North America attest to an extended period of Middle Holocene warming and drying, making this a useful region and period for research on long-term human response to marked climate change. However, archaeological perspectives on human–environment interaction during this episode have remained preoccupied with a refugial model that incorporates limited latitude for dynamic human adaptation. In part, this situation reflects the challenging geomorphological and typological obstacles faced by those studying this period. However, this paper argues that our failure to develop new perspectives also reflects a longstanding and continued conservatism that casts Northern Plains lifeways as inflexible and unchanging, rather than dynamic and adaptable.
Publisher
Geological Society of London
Subject
Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology
Cited by
1 articles.
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