NSFGEO-NERC Collaborative Research: Environmental change and impacts on prehistoric human colonization of Peary Land, northernmost Greenland

Lead Research Organisation: British Antarctic Survey
Department Name: Science Programmes

Abstract

The goal of this project is to understand changes and interactions among arctic system components (climate, people, terrestrial and marine ecosystems, sea-ice and glacier extent) in Peary Land, north of the Greenland Ice Sheet, where people with stone tool technology managed to survive for prolonged periods during the past ~4500 years. We propose to produce multi-proxy high resolution, quantitative records of climate and vegetation from lake sediments, and to examine the persistence of polynyas along the coast, where marine mammals congregate, using high-resolution model simulations. Paleoenvironmental records will be coupled with new archaeological data generated from a field mapping campaign to comprehensively survey sites and a program to radiocarbon date existing archeological materials to improve the chronology of human activities in the region. We will explore the extent to which periods of settlement and times of abandonment were related to climatic fluctuations that affected the availability of terrestrial and marine resources, which were essential for survival in this very remote region. The target region is considered as a model to consider the nexus of climate change, resource availability, and human response in a paleo context-- issues that still resonate today throughout the Arctic.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description The 2023 field season was cancelled due to logistical difficulties getting a helicopter to Northern Greenland in late July/August. The postponed field season is being planned for August 2024. In the meantime, core samples from 3 lakes (Nedre Midsommer Sø, Late Sommer Sø, and Lake Southwest) have been analysed for a number of proxies, including diatoms (NERC-BAS component), alkenone temperature reconstruction (Lamont-Doherty), XRF, Hyperspectral scanning (Bergen & William and Mary), varve counting (UMASS/INRS-Quebec). Radiocarbon dates give good chronologies for the last 7-8 ka BP in both midsummer lakes. 12 new radiocarbon dates on archaeological artifacts confirm ~3.6 - 4ka BP occupation of the site. Analyses of additional proxies (e.g. sedDNA, chironomids, pollen) is ongoing. Manuscript on Lake Southwest record ~1400 yrs) is in mid-stages of preparation with NERC-BAS as co-author, postdoc as lead.
First Year Of Impact 2023
Sector Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections
Impact Types Cultural