2013
DOI: 10.3368/aa.50.1.49
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A High-Resolution Chronology for the Cape Krusenstern Site Complex, Northwest Alaska

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Cited by 21 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…An alternative possibility is that this slightly older datec. 120 -170 14 C years older than those on E. nigrum and R. tarandus-is evidence for the marine mammal oil effect cited by a number of researchers (e.g., Park, 1994;Anderson and Freeburg, 2013). Dumond and Griffin (2002) have suggested that the marine reservoir effect in the Bering Sea is on the order of 450 -750 14 C years.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…An alternative possibility is that this slightly older datec. 120 -170 14 C years older than those on E. nigrum and R. tarandus-is evidence for the marine mammal oil effect cited by a number of researchers (e.g., Park, 1994;Anderson and Freeburg, 2013). Dumond and Griffin (2002) have suggested that the marine reservoir effect in the Bering Sea is on the order of 450 -750 14 C years.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been suggested that seal oils permeate everything to such an extent that the radiocarbon ages of terrestrial materials are significantly skewed (Park, 1994). Although this idea is widespread in the literature (e.g., Morrison, 1989;Park, 1994;McGhee, 2000;Anderson and Freeburg, 2013), the marine mammal oil effect has yet to be demonstrated empirically.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Early Paleo-Eskimo people representing the Denbigh, Pre-Dorset, Independence I, and Saqqaq cultures (~3000 to 800 BCE) lived in tent camps and hunted caribou, musk ox, and seals with exquisitely flaked stone tools similar to those used by northeast Siberian Neolithic cultures (3)(4)(5)(6). In northern Alaska, the Denbigh cultural groups were succeeded by the PaleoEskimo Choris and Norton cultures starting around 900 BCE, with the Norton material culture further developing into the Ipiutak culture around 200 CE (6,7). Simultaneously, during the cold period beginning around 800 BCE, innovations in housing and hunting technologies accompanied the formation of the Late Paleo-Eskimo or Dorset culture in eastern Arctic (eastern Canadian Arctic and Greenland), with population growth and more intensive use of marine mammals, including walrus (8,9).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…; older coastal sites were inundated by early Holocene sea level rise, which did not stabilize until about 5,500 years ago. The early coastal occupation of the region, known locally as the Denbigh phase (4700-3200 BP) (Table 1), is characterized by small, highly mobile foraging groups that seasonally occupied both coastal and interior regions; subsistence 5 included both marine and terrestrial resources (Anderson 1984;Anderson and Freeburg 2013;Giddings and Anderson 1986;Tremayne 2010Tremayne , 2015. Beginning approximately 2000 years ago new Arctic peoples with strong maritime hunting and fishing practices, referred to as the Neoeskimo culture, migrated into northwest Alaska.…”
Section: Development Of Arctic Maritime Traditions In Northern Alaskamentioning
confidence: 99%