Reconstructing anthropogenic impacts within streams and springs in the Rio Grande watershed, northern New Mexico
Topics: Paleoenvironmental Change
, Anthropocene
, Arid Regions
Keywords: paleoenvironments, Holocene, soil, human-environment interaction, Southwest USA
Session Type: Virtual Paper Abstract
Day: Monday
Session Start / End Time: 2/28/2022 02:00 PM (Eastern Time (US & Canada)) - 2/28/2022 03:20 PM (Eastern Time (US & Canada))
Room: Virtual 8
Authors:
Samantha Marie Krause, Department of Geography and Environmental Studies, Texas State University
Alison Damick, Far Western Anthropological Research Group
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Abstract
Significant work in New Mexico has recorded much important information about the anthropogenic environmental strategies among the agricultural communities of the Pueblo peoples, but far less is understood about the environmental impacts of and challenges faced by the various communities that preceded them. The dynamic small catchments fed by spring systems that feed into the Rio Grande in Northern New Mexico provide an opportunity to link alluvial sedimentary deposits and associated environmental changes, directly to some of the oldest archaeological features in the region. During the Mid Holocene, the general region experienced a period of warming temperatures and drying environments, and much of the Archaic hunter-gather period is documented under these types of climatic conditions. In the Late Holocene, many regional climate proxies indicate a shift to generally wetter, cooler conditions, perhaps related to increased precipitation from the North American Monsoon pattern during this time. Such increased precipitation would have led to greater runoff into the valley alluvial systems, as well as higher water tables. This period also coincides with the Late Archaic human occupation of the region and the eventual transition to the early farming practices that characterize the Basketmaker traditions. Our paper presents a range of preliminary geoarchaeological, paleobotanical, and isotopic techniques from two sediment sequences. Our goal is to quantify shifting hydroclimate regimes and document human land use strategies and environmental response to during these early occupation areas in the Upper Rio Grande watershed.
Reconstructing anthropogenic impacts within streams and springs in the Rio Grande watershed, northern New Mexico
Category
Virtual Paper Abstract
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