Exploring Prehistoric Seabird Use in the Bering Sea

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Exploring Prehistoric Seabird Use in the Bering Sea Erica Hill University of Alaska Southeast

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Exploring Prehistoric Seabird Use in the Bering Sea. Erica Hill University of Alaska Southeast. St. Lawrence I. Zooarchaeology of St. Lawrence Island  reconstruct prehistoric subsistence Analysis and identification of animal remains from previously excavated sites. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Exploring Prehistoric Seabird Use in the Bering Sea

Page 1: Exploring Prehistoric Seabird Use in the Bering Sea

Exploring Prehistoric Seabird Use in the Bering Sea

Erica HillUniversity of Alaska Southeast

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St. Lawrence I

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Zooarchaeology of St. Lawrence Island reconstruct prehistoric subsistence

Analysis and identification of animal remains frompreviously excavated sites

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Taxa in SLI faunal assemblages

• Walrus• Phoca spp. (seals)• Bearded seal• Polar bear• Canids• Seabirds (Alcidae)• Fish (probably ground fish)• Sea urchin

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Why Seabirds?

• Seabirds arrive in the spring bridge resource• Many seabirds and eggs can be harvested with minimal risk and skill

• Seabirds and eggs are predictable resources

• Seabirds and eggs are clumped resources

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Alcidae (web-footed diving birds)

• Puffins• Murres and Murrelets

• Auks and Auklets

• Guillemots

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Alcidae (web-footed diving birds)

• Usually associated with northern latitudes• Marine• Wing-propelled pursuit divers• Colonial nesters

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Bird bolas

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Netting auklets, St. Lawrence Island

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Harvesting Eggs on the Diomedes

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Current workCorrelating:

• seabird colonies• walrus haulouts• human settlements

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Conclusions• Breeding site fidelity in seabirds• Humans locating sites near

colonies• Seabirds and their eggs were critical bridge resources