4.5 Article

Defining the spatial patterns of historical land use associated with the indigenous societies of eastern North America

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY
Volume 41, Issue 12, Pages 2195-2210

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jbi.12386

Keywords

Eastern Woodlands; historical ecology; land-use history; Native American; North America; palaeoecology; vegetation history

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [PGSD2-392407]
  2. Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF)
  3. National Science Foundation (NSF) [IGERT-1144752]
  4. Division Of Behavioral and Cognitive Sci
  5. Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie [1333070] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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AimTo review and synthesize multiple lines of evidence that describe the spatial patterns of land use associated with prehistoric and early historical Native American societies in eastern North America in order to better characterize the type, spatial extent and temporal persistence of past land use. LocationTemperate forests of eastern North America, and the Eastern Woodlands cultural region. MethodsEthnohistorical accounts, archaeological data, historical land surveys and palaeoecological records describing indigenous forms of silviculture and agriculture were evaluated across scales ranging from local (10(0)km) to regional (10(2)km) to produce a synthetic description of land-use characteristics. ResultsIndigenous land-use practices created patches of distinct ecological conditions within a heterogeneous mosaic of ecosystem types. At all scales, patch location was dynamic, and patches underwent recurrent periods of expansion, contraction and abandonment. Land-use patches varied in their extent and persistence, and are broadly categorized as silvicultural (management of undomesticated woodland taxa) or agricultural (cultivation of domesticated taxa). Silvicultural patches persisted for centuries and extended kilometres to tens of kilometres around settlements and travel corridors. The dynamics of agricultural patches varied among groups, with persistence ranging from decades to centuries and extent ranging from less than a kilometre to tens of kilometres around settlements. Beyond patch boundaries, human impacts on ecosystems become indistinguishable from other drivers of environmental heterogeneity. These characteristics of patches are evident across scales and multiple lines of evidence. Main conclusionsOur findings challenge the view that prehistoric human impacts on vegetation were widespread and ubiquitous, and build on previous work showing these impacts to be more localized and heterogeneous by providing quantitative descriptions of land-use patch characteristics. Collaborative efforts that combine multiple data sources are needed to refine these descriptions and generate more precise measures of land-use pattern to further investigate the history of human impacts on the Earth system.

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