Relationships Between Whale Hunting, Human Social Organization, and Subsistence Economies in Coastal Areas of Northwest Alaska during Late Prehistoric Times,

Abstract

The florescence of Eskimo whaling on northwest Alaskan coasts during Western Thule times, A.D. 1000-1400, was followed by a shift to a more balanced subsistence pattern for human inhabitants of many coastal areas during Kotzebue Period times, from A.D. 1400-1900. The cause of this shift has been identified as a change in the migration routes of whales passing through Bering Strait which presented a circumstance prohibitive to effective whale hunting. Previous interpretations of social organization of the large whaling villages of the earlier portion of this period have suggested that whale hunting provided a basis for development of social ranking of village inhabitants with the umealik, or whaling captain, assuming the role of a chief Concomitant explanations for the later, more diffuse settlement pattern encountered by early European explorers have not been previously presented. An alternative position presented here is that prehistoric Eskimo societies retained many egalitarian tenets throughout late prehistoric times. This social pattern provided flexibility in subsistence economies with nuclear families as the basic unit transferable from one permanent village to the next, and as a segment of society capable of effectively exploiting sparsely distributed seasonal resource

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Mar 01, 1992
Accession Number
ADP007316

Entities

People

  • R. K. Harritt

Organizations

  • National Park Service

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Climate Change
  • Determinants (Mathematics)
  • Families (Human)
  • Inhabitants
  • Migration
  • Nuclear Family
  • Polar Regions
  • Regions
  • Resilience

Readers

  • Marine Mammal Biology
  • Polar and Arctic Studies
  • Systems Analysis and Design