Scientific Reports (Sep 2021)

The influence of a lost society, the Sadlermiut, on the environment in the Canadian Arctic

  • Finn A. Viehberg,
  • Andrew S. Medeiros,
  • Birgit Plessen,
  • Xiaowa Wang,
  • Derek Muir,
  • Reinhard Pienitz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-97631-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract High latitude freshwater ecosystems are sentinels of human activity and environmental change. The lakes and ponds that characterize Arctic landscapes have a low resilience to buffer variability in climate, especially with increasing global anthropogenic stressors in recent decades. Here, we show that a small freshwater pond in proximity of the archaeological site “Native Point” on Southampton Island (Nunavut, Arctic Canada) is a highly sensitive environmental recorder. The sediment analyses allowed for pinpointing the first arrival of Sadlermiut culture at Native Point to ~ 1250 CE, followed by a dietary shift likely in response to the onset of cooling in the region ~ 1400 CE. The influence of the Sadlermiut on the environment persisted long after the last of their population perished in 1903. Presently, the pond remains a distorted ecosystem that has experienced fundamental shifts in the benthic invertebrate assemblages and accumulated anthropogenic metals in the sediment. Our multi-proxy paleolimnological investigation using geochemical and biological indicators emphasizes that direct and indirect anthropogenic impacts have long-term environmental implications on high latitude ecosystems.