The eastern Aleutian prehistoric archaeological sequence is key for understanding population movements, cultural exchanges, and adaptations to environmental changes over a wide area of the north Pacific and Bering Sea during the Holocene. An important question is, Can the settlement history of the eastern Aleutians be understood as a single continuous tradition lasting some 9,000 years, or were there major population and cultural influxes along with periods of widespread population abandonment? We review the available archaeological evidence with reference to recent mtDNA and nucleic DNA studies of prehistoric and contemporary Arctic and Subarctic populations and conclude that the evidence points to an overall cultural continuity with notable incursions and excursions of people and cultural elements into and out of the eastern Aleutians.
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1 December 2010
Continuity and Change in the Eastern Aleutian Archaeological Sequence
Richard S. Davis,
Richard A. Knecht
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Human Biology
Vol. 82 • No. 5/6
December 2010
Vol. 82 • No. 5/6
December 2010
AMAKNAK ISLAND
ARCTIC SMALL TOOL TRADITION
EASTERN ALEUTIAN PREHISTORY
EASTERN ALEUTIANS
HOG ISLAND
MARGARET BAY
PREHISTORIC ARCHAEOLOGY