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PREHISTORIC CULTURES OF NORTH AMERICA |
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S. Crouthamel, American Indian Studies/Anthropology, Palomar College |
V. Far North Traditions
The Far North includes the Arctic and Subarctic of North America that begins in the Aleutian Islands of Alaska and the rest of Alaska across the Canadian shield to and including Greenland. The Arctic is a treeless tundra in which the Yupik, Inuit (Eskimo), and Aleut peoples adapted with various hunting and gathering (foraging) lifestyles that included resources almost equally from the land( especially caribou) and the sea (especially fish and sea mammal). During the winter many Inuit peoples had to trek out across the frozen sea or sea ice to find sea mammals and fish living under the ice in Arctic waters. This is where our image of dog sleds, fur parkas and igloos comes from. These people are not American Indians but they are Native Americans with definitive origins (Paleo-Siberian language) derived from Siberia from 7,000 to 2,500 years ago. However, if origin theories have any validity many American Indian groups must have come through these areas that were later occupied by the Yupik, Inuit and Aleut peoples. Certainly, we also know that the Athabascan (Dene) and Algonkian Indians settled in the Subarctic. These people were basically forest hunters and fisherman, since the Subarctic is a vast boreal forest with huge glacially formed lakes and bays including Hudsons' Bay itself. Anywhere from 30,000 years ago to 3,000 years ago quite a variety of people must have made their way into the continent. The sparsicity of sites is baffling unless may were destroyed by glaciers and alternative flooding.
In each of these sections we will summarize the traditions from the text, discuss the implications of cultural change and elaborate with exemplary sites...including our five case study sites.
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TRADITION |
Times/Space |
Sites |
| Paleo-Arctic Tradition (NW Microblade) | 8,000-5,000 B.C. Alaska-Yukon | Gallagher Flint; Ugashik Narrows; Anangula |
| Early Coastal/Kodiak Is./ Aleutian Core & Blade Traditions | 5,000 B.C-? Aleutians | Anangula |
| Aleutian Tradition | 2,500 B.C.- A.D.1800 Aleutians | Anangula; Hot Springs; Chaluka |
| Arctic Small Tool Tradition | 2,750 B.C-800 B.C SW Alaska-Greenland | Naknek; Chugachik Is. |
| Norton (Choris-Norton-Ipiutak) Tradition | 1,000 B.C.-A.D. 800 Alaska-Hudson's Bay | Cape Krusenstern; Ugashik;Pt. Hope; Pt. Barrow |
| Thule Tradition | 700 B.C. - A.D. 1400- contact St. Lawrence Is.-Alaskan Peninsula | Cape Denbigh; Nunivak Is. |
| Dorset Tradition | 500 B.C.-A.D. 1200 NW Hudson's Bay- Greenland | Killilugak; Victoria Is.; Button Pt./Bylot Is. |
| Archaic Subarctic Tradition (Denetasiro) | 5,000 B.C.- | |
The Paleo-Arctic Tradition and Early Coastal Traditions are lithic traditions of early cultures that may represent American Indian peoples come through the Aleutians and Alaska. The Aleutian Tradition and Arctic Small Tool Tradition may represent the first predecessors of the Aleut, Yupik, and Inuit peoples.
The Aleutian Tradition is a long term development of technologies (stone,
bone, wood and cordage) directed toward the hunting of sea mammals, sea birds
and shellfish/fish on the Aleutian Islands and S. Alaska. The people lived in
stone/sod and wooden semi-subterranean houses in a cold rainy environment the
has some of the most surprisingly rich variety of sea life on earth. Hunters
developed atlatl and harpoon systems for killing sea mammals in two man skin
boats called baidarkas.
Both
men and women fished and snarred a variety of deep sea and coastal animals, such
as sea urchin, abalone, cormorant, etc. This tradition continued until major
disruption from Russian and other European whalers and sea otter hunters came in
the late 1700's and early 1800's. The Anangula site on Umnak Is. represents over
6000 years occupation in the Aleutians from Early Coastal through Aleutian
Traditions.
Arctic Small Tool Tradition was an interior and coastal adaptation that primarily involved hunting of caribou/reindeer, birds, sea mammal (coastal) and fishing (coastal-riverine) along bays and the interior of Alaska. Some scholars feel that this culture may have been responsible for the advent of the bow and arrow as evidenced by bone and small unifacial stone tips around 2000 B.C. These people, as the name suggests produced a number of small blades, burins, projectile points and knife-like side scrappers.
At about 1000 BC. new people and or technologies spread across the Arctic from Alaska to Greenland and are represented in the archaeological record with the Norton, Dorset and Thule Traditions. An increase in technological innovations like pottery, oil lamps, sleds and toggle harpoons allowed for Inuit peoples to specialize their adaptations to maritime, riverine, coastal and terrestrial ecological niches. Boats (kyak and umiak), housing (stone, sod, skin and snow) and dog sleds reflected the various adaptations. Their was an increase of arts with bone, stone and ivory carvings with strong connections to shamanic practices, amulets and hunting magic. The most dramatic adaptation is that of the polar peoples above Hudson's Bay who hunted caribou in the summer and went out on the sea ice to hunt seals through breathing holes. Only the ability to build a snow house (igloo), dog sleds, and the toggle harpoon combined with hunting knowledge and skill would people be successful and survive. The sites at Point Hope (Ipiutak) and Arctic Bay (Thule) represent these northern adaptations.
| Arctic Artifact Photo Gallery |

The Archaic Subarctic Tradition represent Athabascan and Algonkian Indians hunting and gathering in the boreal Subarctic forests. Hunting caribou in the north and moose in the south with some birds and lake fish provided for the people. They too developed stone tools for hunting and processing game, eventually shifting from atlatl to bow and arrow and developing soft material things like canoes and snow shoes. Onion Portage, Alaska is a site that reveals the increasingly smaller lithics that develop to accommodate the introduction of the bow and arrow. In Newfoundland and the St. Lawrence there were maritime adaptations of these cultures at sites like Port aux Chiox, Newfoundland.
Copyright © S. J. Crouthamel