4.2 Article

Malacological insights into the marine ecology and changing climate of the late Pleistocene-early Holocene Queen Charlotte Islands archipelago, western Canada, and implications for early peoples

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY
Volume 81, Issue 4, Pages 626-661

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/Z03-024

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The first intertidal species to colonize the Queen Charlotte Islands archipelago along the northeastern Pacific margin of Canada after the last glacial maximum (LGM) was Macoma nasuta at 13210+/-80 C-14 years BP. Prior to this time, molluscs were likely excluded where grounded ice extended from the 2 km thick Cordilleran ice sheet on mainland British Columbia. Low water temperatures, high sedimentation rates, high turbidity, dilution, and low primary productivity limited invertebrate colonization subsequent to the LGM, a period of rapid sea-level and climate change. As an adult, M. nasuta is a facultative deposit-suspension feeder that tolerates high turbidity and lowered salinity, and its pediveligers and early juveniles must also have been able to survive these conditions. Subsequently, in addition to M. nasuta, Macoma irus (inquinata), Saxidomus giganteus, Protothaca staminea, Protothaca tenerrima, Hiatella pholadis, Clinocardium nuttallii, and Mytilus trossulus constituted a typical intertidal bivalve assemblage. These findings are explained in terms of the physiology, feeding mechanisms, development, and sediment preferences of living molluscs. The disappearance of most bivalve species between similar to11000 and 10000 C-14 years BP indicates the onset of a short interval of low sea-surface temperatures coincident with the Younger Dryas cooling event. Some cold-hardy species persisted, including Clinocardium californiense, Mya truncata, and Serripes groenlandicus. Bivalve species not previously reported as Pleistocene fossils were collected in sediments dating older than 10000 C-14 years BP. They include Macoma incongrua, Musculus taylori, Mytilimeria nuttallii, and Tellina nuculoides. Fossil assemblages of intertidal molluscs are used to map ancient shorelines and indicate which species were available as a subsistence resource for early peoples from at least 13210+/-80 C-14 years BP. Intertidal food biomass densities may have reached present commercially harvested levels on southern Moresby Island by 8800+/-70 C-14 years BP and on northern Graham Island by 8990+/-50 C-14 years BP. When early peoples might have been migrating along the littoral zone, the molluscan productivity of the outer coast was much higher than it is at present.

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