Climate change and the people of the North Slope Mesa
by Ned Rozell / Alaska Science Forum
Jun 27, 2011 | 2168 views | 3 3 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Photo courtesy Mike Kunz
The Mesa site on Alaska’s North Slope.
Photo courtesy Mike Kunz The Mesa site on Alaska’s North Slope.
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FAIRBANKS - People tend to think of climate change as a recent phenomenon, but Alaska was once the setting for an environmental shift so dramatic it forced people to evacuate the entire North Slope, according to Michael Kunz, an archaeologist with the Bureau of Land Management.

About 10,000 years ago, a group of hunting people lived on Alaska’s north slope, the broad band of treeless tundra that extends north from the Brooks Range to the sea. These people, known as Paleoindians, used a thick backbone of rock west of the Colville River as a hunting lookout. Michael Kunz first discovered stone spear tips at the site, known as the Mesa, in 1978.

The people of the Mesa lived at a time when the Arctic was undergoing a change not unlike the changes some scientists are documenting today. As the world emerged from the last ice age about 15,000 years ago, grasslands covered much of the Bering Land Bridge, a chunk of land as wide as the distance from Barrow to Homer that mated Siberia with Alaska.

To survive in a place like the North Slope, where life is dicey in the best of times, humans needed a few things, Kunz said. One was technology, which the Mesa people had in the form of bone needles they used to sew weather-tight clothing. Another vital element was a large, plentiful source of food. Caribou were scarce during the time of the Mesa people, but bison roamed the grasslands in good numbers. Those bison are the key to how climate change affected these ancient Alaskans, Kunz said.

For many thousands of years, the area that is now Alaska was part of an enormous swath of dry grasslands that made up much of the Bering Land Bridge. About 15,000 years ago, the planet started emerging from the last ice age. Air temperatures became warmer, and things started to change. Glaciers began melting, sea level rose, and salt water slowly drowned the Bering Land Bridge. The encroachment of the ocean caused an increase in precipitation around the North Slope that allowed cottongrass and other sedges to nudge out the grasses preferred by bison.

About 10,000 years ago, as the North Slope evolved to what it looks like today, bison disappeared. The last evidence of the Mesa Paleoindians comes from around the same time. Kunz thinks the extinction of the bison from the North Slope, along with the simultaneous scarcity of caribou, caused the Mesa people to move or die out.

“This is totally the effect of the environment,” Kunz said. “Not only did it run the Paleoindians out of there, it made the place unlivable for anyone for 1,500 years.”

By examining bones and stone tools, archaeologists found that people moved back to the North Slope about 8,000 years ago, about the same time caribou returned after what seems like a population crash that lasted more than 3,000 years.

Kunz pointed out that car exhaust did not trigger the warming that may have chased the Mesa people from the North Slope. He said climate change has occurred many times before and is inevitable today. He suggests that the human species as a whole should think of how it will work around problems, such as rising sea level and the changes in agricultural zones caused by different weather patterns.

“The system has always been dynamic,” he said. “We’re not going to stop climate change. Just like the Mesa Paleoindians — if you can’t adapt or adjust, you’re going to disappear.”

This column is provided as a public service by the Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks, in cooperation with the UAF research community. Ned Rozell is a science writer at the institute. This column first appeared in 2001.

Comments
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Invictus
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July 02, 2011
Excellent column! Really fascinating.
therecalcitrant
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June 29, 2011
Ned Rozell's column from 2001... Does Ned have an update? Has anything changed in his opinion, or that of Mr. Kunz?
biggboyy
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June 27, 2011
After too many years of Al Gore, and his followers around the world, who have bought into the politicized believe that "global warming" or global climate change is only, or mostly caused by man, this one article alone explains it best!!! There is NO question in my mind that the developed nations HAVE NOT BEEN good "stewards" of our planet. We ARE dumping too much into our air, water,and earth. But to blame any one Nation of causing Global warming or climate change because of excessive waste, or consuming to much of the worlds resources, is not accurate. As Michael Kunz correctly points out, we are living in a Dynamic Eco system! The last time I checked, there were no guarantees that the weather,rivers, oceans or land would not change! I have thought for sometime now that it has been insane (but predictable) for the politicans to tell people that because of how they live, they are "the" primary cause of changing weather. More hurricans, flooding, tornados, droughts and so on! I'm not buying folks! If we can overcome all the dis-information and political manuvering going on we need to prepare and put into place, systems to provide the basics for living, such as having enough agricultural production in times of drought. Enough clean water. We need clear decisive leadership, not only from Washington but from around the World. That means providing true and accurate information for people, and to not play the blame game or finger point as to who's at fault, because we all are.
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