An Interdisciplinary Human-Environmental Examination of Effects Consistent with the Anthropocene in the Lower Illinois River Valley

Using archaeological and ecological data of animal communities, and fish communities in particular, we test for evidence consistent with the Anthropocene in the lower Illinois River valley across millennia. Environmental impacts by preindustrialized peoples may be minor compared to current alteratio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Midcontinental journal of archaeology 2017-09, Vol.42 (3), p.266-290
Hauptverfasser: Colaninno, Carol E., Chick, John H., Martin, Terrance J., Painter, Autumn M., Brown, Kelly B., Dopson, Curtis T., Enzerink, Ariana O., Goesmann, Stephanie R., Higgins, Tom, Knutzen, Nigel Q., Laute, Erin N., Long, Paula M., Ottenfeld, Paige L., Uehling, Abigail T., Ward, Lillian C.
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container_end_page 290
container_issue 3
container_start_page 266
container_title Midcontinental journal of archaeology
container_volume 42
creator Colaninno, Carol E.
Chick, John H.
Martin, Terrance J.
Painter, Autumn M.
Brown, Kelly B.
Dopson, Curtis T.
Enzerink, Ariana O.
Goesmann, Stephanie R.
Higgins, Tom
Knutzen, Nigel Q.
Laute, Erin N.
Long, Paula M.
Ottenfeld, Paige L.
Uehling, Abigail T.
Ward, Lillian C.
description Using archaeological and ecological data of animal communities, and fish communities in particular, we test for evidence consistent with the Anthropocene in the lower Illinois River valley across millennia. Environmental impacts by preindustrialized peoples may be minor compared to current alterations; however, this hypothesis is untested and should be assessed. Using the relative abundance of fish taxa, we tested for differences among archaeological and modern time periods, taking advantage of published zooarchaeological data sets and newly analyzed data. Collections from all archaeological time periods differed significantly from modern collections, but the relative abundance of fishes did not differ significantly among archaeological time periods. Sociopolitical context, material culture, plant-based subsistence patterns, and the use of animal classes shifted temporally, but these differences did not extend to the relative abundance of fish families. Our results suggest that dominating human influences on fish communities did not occur prior to the Late Woodland period in the lower Illinois River.
doi_str_mv 10.1080/01461109.2017.1375067
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subjects Anthropocene
Interdisciplinary research
lower Illinois River valley
Zooarchaeology
title An Interdisciplinary Human-Environmental Examination of Effects Consistent with the Anthropocene in the Lower Illinois River Valley
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