Human Colonization of the Arctic: The Interaction Between Early Migration and the Paleoenvironment

Human Colonization of the Arctic: The Interaction Between Early Migration and the Paleoenvironment

Kotlyakov, V.M.
Velichko, A. A.
Vasil'ev, S. A.

148,72 €(IVA inc.)

Human Colonization of the Arctic explores this relationship between humans and the environment during this early time of colonization, utilizing analytical methods from both the social and natural sciences to develop a unique, interdisciplinary approach, giving the reader a much broader understanding of the interrelationship between humanity and the environment. Colonization of the polar region was intermittent and irregular, based on how early humans interacted with the land. Humans developed new ways to make this region more habitable, changes which impacted their societies and the environment itself. This applies not only to the physical continents but also the arctic waters. This is how humans succeeded in crossing the Bering Strait and water area between Canadian Arctic Islands. About 4500 years ago humans reached the northern extremity of Greenland and was able to live through the many months of the polar night by both adapting to and making adaptations to the environment, as this book explores. Written by pioneering experts in the relationship between humans and the environment in the arcticAddresses why the patterns of colonization were so irregularIncludes coverage of the earliest examples of humans developing an understanding of ecosystem services for economic development in extreme climatesCovers both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems INDICE: PART 1 REGIONS OF INITIAL COLONIZATION 1. European North 2. Siberian North 3. Beringia (North-East of Asia, Alaska, Yukon) 4. Canadian North, Greenland, Iceland 5. Greenland 6. Iceland PART 2 SPECIFIC FEATURES OF THE INITIAL COLONIZATION 7. Expansion of the oecumene northwards and paleodiet tradition on the Paleolithic humans in Eurasia: Neanderthals and Modern Humans 8. Mesolithic population in the north of Eastern Europe 9. Way to North: anthropological evidence of adaptive abilities of the first inhabitants in the High Latitudes 10. Genetic data on the colonization of the High Latitudes 11. Stages of initial human colonization of Arctic and Subarctic

  • ISBN: 978-0-12-813532-7
  • Editorial: Academic Press
  • Encuadernacion: Rústica
  • Páginas: 766
  • Fecha Publicación: 01/08/2017
  • Nº Volúmenes: 1
  • Idioma: Inglés