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Engineered feature used to enhance gardening at a 3800-year-old site on the Pacific Northwest Coast.


ABSTRACT: Humans use a variety of deliberate means to modify biologically rich environs in pursuit of resource stability and predictability. Empirical evidence suggests that ancient hunter-gatherer populations engineered ecological niches to enhance the productivity and availability of economically significant resources. An archaeological excavation of a 3800-year-old wetland garden in British Columbia, Canada, provides the first direct evidence of an engineered feature designed to facilitate wild plant food production among mid-to-late Holocene era complex fisher-hunter-gatherers of the Northwest Coast. This finding provides an example of environmental, economic, and sociopolitical coevolutionary relationships that are triggered when humans manipulate niche environs.

SUBMITTER: Hoffmann T 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5176348 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Dec

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Engineered feature used to enhance gardening at a 3800-year-old site on the Pacific Northwest Coast.

Hoffmann Tanja T   Lyons Natasha N   Miller Debbie D   Diaz Alejandra A   Homan Amy A   Huddlestan Stephanie S   Leon Roma R  

Science advances 20161221 12


Humans use a variety of deliberate means to modify biologically rich environs in pursuit of resource stability and predictability. Empirical evidence suggests that ancient hunter-gatherer populations engineered ecological niches to enhance the productivity and availability of economically significant resources. An archaeological excavation of a 3800-year-old wetland garden in British Columbia, Canada, provides the first direct evidence of an engineered feature designed to facilitate wild plant f  ...[more]

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