2018
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.4393
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The overkill model and its impact on environmental research

Abstract: Research on human‐environment interactions that informs ecological practices and guides conservation and restoration has become increasingly interdisciplinary over the last few decades. Fueled in part by the debate over defining a start date for the Anthropocene, historical disciplines like archeology, paleontology, geology, and history are playing an important role in understanding long‐term anthropogenic impacts on the planet. Pleistocene overkill, the notion that humans overhunted megafauna near the end of … Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…It is hypothesized that during this period, human hunters were responsible for the massive extinction events and habitat destruction as they spread from Africa to other continents (Faith, 2014 ; Martin, 1967 ). However, the role played by humans in the late Pleistocene extinction events is still debated (Nagaoka et al, 2018 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is hypothesized that during this period, human hunters were responsible for the massive extinction events and habitat destruction as they spread from Africa to other continents (Faith, 2014 ; Martin, 1967 ). However, the role played by humans in the late Pleistocene extinction events is still debated (Nagaoka et al, 2018 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first application of stable isotopes (δ 18 O) for obtaining paleotemperature and climatic records was tested with marine mollusks (Urey et al, 1951;Epstein and Lowenstam, 1953;Valentine and Meade, 1960;Krantz et al, 1987) and as the ability to sample smaller organisms improved, deep-sea foraminifera have given us the best record of Cenozoic climate change (Zachos et al, 2001). Vertebrate paleontology, as well, presented the overkill hypothesis which focused on humans as major hunters of megamammals, leading to their extinction during the Late Pleisotocene (Martin, 1967;1990) although there were other contributing factors, like climate change (Nagaoka et al, 2018). With the long history of conservation work using fossils-often published in many disciplines like environmental geology, historical geology, paleoecology, and micropaleontology-it was just a matter of time that conservation paleobiology, as a discipline, was coined.…”
Section: Ad 1990s To Today: Conservation Paleobiology a Full-fledged ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the Americas, the late Pleistocene extinction of megafauna was severe and occurred at the same time of significant climate changes and human colonization, so the debate on the causes of extinction has been more controversial and persistent than in other continents. While the role of humans versus climate and other causes has been debated for almost 50 years in North America [14][15][16][17], few researchers, especially among archeologists, considered that humans had played a major role in South America until relatively recently (reviewed by [18]). This view has shifted in recent years, mainly due to paleoecological and paleontological studies increasingly assigning a possible major role to humans and concluding that more than one factor may be responsible for most extinctions [6,11,18].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%