Isotopic Evidence For Long-Distance Connections Of The Ad Thirteenth-Century Promontory Caves Occupants

AMERICAN ANTIQUITY(2021)

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摘要
The Promontory caves (Utah) and Franktown Cave (Colorado) contain high-fidelity records of short-term occupations by groups with material culture connections to the Subarctic/Northern Plains. This research uses Promontory and Franktown bison dung, hair, hide, and bone collagen to establish local baseline carbon isotopic variability and identify leather from a distant source. The ankle wrap of one Promontory Cave 1 moccasin had a delta C-13 value that indicates a substantial C-4 component to the animal's diet, unlike the C-3 diets inferred from 171 other Promontory and northern Utah bison samples. We draw on a unique combination of multitissue isotopic analysis, carbon isoscapes, ancient DNA (species and sex identification), tissue turnover rates, archaeological contexts, and bison ecology to show that the high delta C-13 value was not likely a result of local plant consumption, bison mobility, or trade. Instead, the bison hide was likely acquired via long-distance travel to/from an area of abundant C-4 grasses far to the south or east. Expansive landscape knowledge gained through long-distance associations would have allowed Promontory caves inhabitants to make well-informed decisions about directions and routes of movement for a territorial shift, which seems to have occurred in the late thirteenth century.
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关键词
stable isotopes, migration, mobility, bison, Great Basin, Promontory Caves, Franktown Cave, Dene, Athapaskan, Apachean
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