Back to Search
Start Over
Radiocarbon Date Frequency as an Index of Intensity of Paleolithic Occupation of Siberia: Did Humans React Predictably to Climate Oscillations?
- Source :
- Radiocarbon. 49:741-756
- Publication Year :
- 2007
- Publisher :
- Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2007.
-
Abstract
- Upper Paleolithic humans occupied southern Siberia by about 43,000–38,000 BP (14C yr), and afterward continued to live there despite the very cold climate. If climatic conditions limited expansion of the colonizing population in northern Siberia, the Paleolithic ecumene should have contracted during the coldest episodes within the last 40,000 yr, and fewer 14C-dated sites should be known from those periods. In fact, the human population seems to have remained stable or even expanded during cold periods. Comparison of calibrated 14C dates for Siberian occupations with Greenland ice cores fails to demonstrate a simple correlation between climatic fluctuations and the dynamics of human colonization and persistence in Siberia between about 36,000 and 12,000 BP. Cold climate does not appear to have posed any significant challenge to humans in Siberia in the Late Pleistocene, and a supposed Last Glacial Maximum “hiatus” in population dynamics seems illusory.
- Subjects :
- 010506 paleontology
Archeology
education.field_of_study
060102 archaeology
Pleistocene
Population
Last Glacial Maximum
06 humanities and the arts
Hiatus
01 natural sciences
law.invention
Geography
Ice core
law
Climatology
Upper Paleolithic
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
0601 history and archaeology
Colonization
Physical geography
Radiocarbon dating
education
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19455755 and 00338222
- Volume :
- 49
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Radiocarbon
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........db753de92a2797bdf97db55182add28c
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0033822200042624