Abstracts
Résumé
La fouille du site de Nunalleq (GDN-248) en territoire yup’ik a révélé une succession d’au moins trois niveaux allant vers 1570-1630 après J.C. à 1645–1675 après J.C. correspondant à plusieurs phases de construction et d’habitation d’une maison semi-souterraine de l’époque précontact du village historiquement appelé Agaligmiut. Les occupations du site s’inscrivent dans le cadre historique des Bow-and-Arrow Wars, et le dernier niveau concerne justement la destruction et l’abandon du village après un raid par un groupe extérieur. Cette étude se focalise sur l’outillage en pierre, et plus précisément sur les pointes de projectiles. Il s’agit donc d’étudier cette période de conflits à travers un des types d’outils ayant justement servi à ce conflit : les armatures de flèches. L’étude de ce matériel a permis de mieux comprendre le déroulement de l’attaque qui a conduit à la destruction et l’abandon du village, ainsi que certains aspects de la période des Bow-and-Arrow Wars, qui demeure relativement peu connue d’un point de vue archéologique.
Mots-clés:
- Nunalleq,
- Agaligmiut,
- archéologie yup’ik,
- Alaska,
- Bow-and-Arrow Wars ,
- technologie lithique,
- armement
Abstract
The excavation of the Nunalleq site (GDN-248), located in Yup’ik territory, revealed a succession of at least three phases ranging from c. A.D. 1570-1630 to c. A.D. 1645-1675 corresponding to several phases of construction and habitation of a sod dwelling dating from the pre-contact period of the historical village known as Agaligmiut. The occupation of the site takes place during the Bow-and-Arrow Wars, and the last phase actually corresponds to the destruction and abandonment of the village after a raid by an outside group. This study focuses on stone tools, and more specifically on projectile points. The objective is therefore to study this period of conflicts through one of the types of tools having served precisely to this conflict: the arrow points (end-blades). The study of these artifacts helped to better understand the course of the attack that led to the destruction and abandonment of the village, as well as some aspects of the period of the Bow-and-Arrow Wars, which remains relatively unknown from an archaeological point of view.
Keywords:
- Nunalleq,
- Agaligmiut,
- Yup’ik archaeology,
- Alaska,
- Bow-and-Arrow Wars ,
- lithic technology,
- weaponry
Appendices
Références
- Ackerman, Robert E. 1964. « Prehistory in the Kuskokwim-Bristol Bay Region, Southwestern Alaska ». Report of Investigations 26. Pullman : Washington State University.
- Britton, Kate, Ellen McManus-Fry, Olaf Nehlich, Mike Richards, Paul M. Ledger et Rick Knecht. 2018. « Stable Carbon, Nitrogen and Sulphur Isotope Analysis of Permafrost Preserved Human Hair from Rescue Excavations (2009, 2010) at the Precontact Site of Nunalleq, Alaska », Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 17 : 950-63.
- Burch, Ernest S. 1974. Eskimo Warfare in Northwest Alaska. Anthropological Papers of the University of Alaska 16. Fairbanks : University of Alaska.
- Burch, Ernest S. 2005. Alliance and Conflict: The World System of the Iñupiaq Eskimos. Lincoln, University of Nebraska Press.
- Clark, Donal W. 1984. « Prehistory of the Pacific Eskimo Region », in David Damas (dir.), Arctic, 5 : 136-48. Handbook of North American Indians. Washington D.C., Smithsonian Institution Press.
- Dumond, Don E. 1977. The Eskimos and Aleuts. London : Thames and Hudson.
- Dumond, Don E. 1984. « Prehistory of the Bering Sea region », in David Damas (dir.), Arctic, 5 : 94-105. Handbook of North American Indians. Washington D.C. : Smithsonian Institution Press.
- Farrell, Thomas FG, Peter Jordan, Karine Taché, Alexandre Lucquin, Kevin Gibbs, Ana Jorge, Kate Britton, Oliver E. Craig et Rick Knecht. 2014. « Specialized Processing of Aquatic Resources in Prehistoric Alaskan Pottery? A Lipid-Residue Analysis of Ceramic Sherds from the Thule-Period Site of Nunalleq, Alaska », Arctic Anthropology 51 (1) : 86-100.
- Fienup-Riordan, Ann. 1988. The Yup’ik Eskimos: as Described in the Travel Journals and Ethnographic Accounts of John and Edith Kilbuck, who Served with the Alaska Mission of the Moravian Church, 1885-1900. Kingston, : Limestone Press.
- Fienup-Riordan, Ann. 1994. « Eskimo War and Peace », in William W. Fitzhugh et Valérie Chaussonnet (dir.) Anthropology of the North Pacific Rim, p. 321-35. Washington, DC. : Smithsonian Institution Press.
- Fienup-Riordan, Ann et Alice Rearden. 2016. Anguyiim Nalliini/Time of Warring: The History of Bow-and-Arrow Warfare in Southwest Alaska. Fairbanks : University of Alaska Press.
- Forbes, Véronique, Kate Britton et Rick Knecht. 2015. « Preliminary Archaeoentomological Analyses of Permafrost-Preserved Cultural Layers from the Pre-Contact Yup’ik Eskimo Site of Nunalleq, Alaska: Implications, Potential and Methodological Considerations », Environmental Archaeology 20 (2 ): 158-67.
- Funk, Caroline. 2010. « The bow and Arrow War Days on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta of Alaska ». Ethnohistory 57 (4) : 523-69.
- Giddings, James Louis, et Douglas D. Anderson. 1986. Beach Ridge Archeology of Cape Krusenstern: Eskimo and Pre-Eskimo Settlements around Kotzebue Sound, Alaska. Washington D.C. : National Park Service.
- Griffin, Dennis. 2002. « A History of Human Settlement on Nunivak Island, Alaska: Insights from Recent Investigations at Nash Harbor Village », Arctic Anthropology 39 (1-2) : 51-68.
- Harritt, Roger K. 1988. The Late Prehistory of Brooks River, Alaska: A Model for Analysis of Occupations on the Alaska Peninsula. Vol. 38. University of Oregon Anthropological Papers. Eugene : University of Oregon.
- Jensen, Anne M. et Glenn W. Sheehan. 2016. « Contact and Postcontact Iñupiat Ethnohistory ». In The Oxford Handbook of the Prehistoric Arctic, édité par T. Max Friesen et Owen K. Mason, 631-50. New York : Oxford University Press.
- Jordan, Celeste. 2014. « Yup’ik Eskimo Kayak Miniatures: Preliminary Notes on Kayaks from the Nunalleq Site », DigIt 2 (1) : 28-33.
- Larsen, Helge. 1950. « Archaeological investigations in southwestern Alaska », American Antiquity 15 (3) : 177-86.
- Ledger, Paul M. 2018. « Are Circumpolar Hunter-Gatherers Visible in the Palaeoenvironmental Record ? Pollen-Analytical Evidence from Nunalleq, Southwestern Alaska », The Holocene 28 (3) : 415-26.
- Ledger, Paul M., Véronique Forbes, Edouard Masson-Maclean, Charlotta Hillerdal, W. Derek Hamilton, Ellen McManus-Fry, Ana Jorge, Kate Britton et Richard A. Knecht. 2018. « Three Generations Under One Roof? Bayesian Modeling of Radiocarbon Data from Nunalleq, Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska », American Antiquity 83 (3) : 505-24.
- Ledger, Paul M., Véronique Forbes, Edouard Masson-MacLean, et Richard A. Knecht. 2016. « Dating and Digging Stratified Archaeology in Circumpolar North America: A View from Nunalleq, Southwestern Alaska », Arctic, 378-90.
- Mann, Daniel H., Aron L. Crowell, Thomas D. Hamilton, et Bruce P. Finney. 1998. « Holocene Geologic and Climatic History around the Gulf of Alaska », Arctic Anthropology 35 (1) : 112-31.
- Mason, Owen K. 2012. « Memories of Warfare: Archaeology and Oral History in Assessing the Conflict and Alliance Model of Ernest S. Burch », Arctic Anthropology 49 (2) : 72-93.
- Mason, Owen K. 2016a. « From the Norton Culture to the Ipiutak Cult in Northwest Alaska », in T. Max Friesen et Owen K. Mason(dir.), The Oxford Handbook of the Prehistoric Arctic, p. 443-67. New York, Oxford University Press.
- Mason, Owen K. 2016b. « Thule Origins in the Old Bering Sea Culture: The Interrelationship of Punuk and Birnirk Cultures », in T. Max Friesen et Owen K. Mason (dir.), The Oxford Handbook of the Prehistoric Arctic, p. 489-512. New York : Oxford University Press.
- McManus-Fry, Ellen, Rick Knecht, Keith Dobney, Michael P. Richards et Kate Britton. 2018. « Dog-Human Dietary Relationships in Yup’ik Western Alaska: the Stable Isotope and Zooarchaeological Evidence from Pre-Contact Nunalleq », Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 17 : 964-72.
- Nelson, Edward William. 1900. The Eskimo about Bering Strait. Washington, DC. : US Government Printing Office..
- O’Leary, Matt. 2007. « A Roster of BIA ANCSA Radiocarbon Dates », Alaska Journal of Anthropology 5 (1) : 123.
- Oswalt, Wendell H. 1952. « The Archaeology of Hooper Bay Village, Alaska », Anthropological Papers of the University of Alaska 1 (1) : 47-91.
- Oswalt, Wendell H. et James W. VanStone. 1967. The Ethnoarcheology of Crow Village, Alaska. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 199. Washington, DC. : Smithsonian Institution Press.
- Pratt, Kenneth L. 2009. « Nuniwarmiut Land Use, Settlement History And Socio-Territorial Organization, 1880–1960 ». Thèse de Doctorat. Fairbanks University of Alaska.
- Pratt, Kenneth L. 2013. « Deconstructing the Aglurmiut Migration: An Analysis of Accounts from the Russian-America Period to the Present », Alaska Journal of Anthropology 11 : 17-36.
- Raghavan, Maanasa, Michael DeGiorgio, Anders Albrechtsen, Ida Moltke, Pontus Skoglund, Thorfinn S. Korneliussen, Bjarne Grønnow. 2014. « The Genetic Prehistory of the New World Arctic », Science 345 (6200) : 1255832.
- Redgate, Leonie. 2016. « Understanding Pre-Contact Yup’ik Weaponry: An Interpretation of Morphological Variation in Lithic Endblades from Nunalleq ». Mémoire de Maîtrise. Universty of Aberdeen.
- Shaw, Robert D. 1998. « An Archaeology of the Central Yupik: A Regional Overview for the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Northern Bristol Bay, and Nunivak Island », Arctic Anthropology 35 (1) : 234-46.
- Tauber, Henrik. 1960. « Copenhagen Natural Radiocarbon Measurements III, Corrections to Radiocarbon Dates Made with the Solid Carbon Technique », Radiocarbon 2 : 5-11.
- VanStone, James W. 1954. « Pottery from Nunivak Island, Alaska », Anthropological Papers of the University of Alaska 2 (2) : 181-93.
- VanStone, James W. (dir.). 1988. Russian Exploration in Southwest Alaska: The Travel journals of Petr Korsakovskiy (1818) and Ivan Ya. Vasilev (1829). Fairbanks : University of Alaska Press.