Abstract

ABSTRACT The middle Holocene period is marked by an apparent increase in the use of upland subsistence resources across North America. This pattern has also been observed in the uplands of central Alaska; however, we have limited understanding of the nature of upland hunter-gatherer land-use strategies during this time. This study presents a lithic technological organization analysis of three middle Holocene sites in the upper Susitna River basin, central Alaska Range, to evaluate middle Holocene land-use strategies. The Middle Holocene lithic assemblages presented here have characteristics of a low mobility land-use system in contrast with preceding periods. An important driver of middle Holocene upland land-use intensification may have been a warming climate and associated shift in vegetation patterns and caribou range. Understanding the intensity with which hunter-gatherers in the past utilized upland landscapes has implications for understanding ecological change in marginal ecosystems.

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