Modern Ecological Structure and Lithic Resources of Northern Norway

Archaeological Perspectives on Hunter-Gatherer Landscapes and Resource Management in Interior North Norway - Marianne Skandfer

Hans Peter Blankholm [+-]
UiT - The Arctic University of Norway
Hans Peter Blankholm is Professor Emeritus of archaeology at the Department of Archaeology, History, Religious Studies and Theology, UiT – The Arctic University of Norway, Tromsø, Norway. His research covers Stone Age archaeology of Scandinavia, analytical methodology relating to spatial analyses, GIS, remote sensing, predictive modelling and biochemical analyses of foodways. Professor Blankholm is a member of the board for the Earth and Environmental Sciences Division within the European Academy of Sciences, and a member of UISPP Commission IV Quantitative Methods.
Bryan C. Hood [+-]
UiT - the Arctic University of Norway
Bryan C. Hood is Professor Emeritus of Archaeology in the Department of Archaeology, History, Religious Studies and Theology at UiT – The Arctic University of Norway, Tromsø, Norway. His research interests focus on Arctic and Subarctic hunter-gatherers, with fieldwork in northeastern Canada, Greenland, northern Norway and northwest Russia. He has published a book on the archaeology of northern Labrador, Canada, and papers on various aspects of the northern Norwegian Stone Age, including lithic procurement, Mesolithic settlement of the interior and coastal shellfish use. He is currently working on books dealing with Stone Age houses dated ca. 2000 BC in northeastern Norway and on the Kola Peninsula, Russia.

Description

Archaeological and anthropological discussions of human relationships with the environment in northern Norway are usually based on a fundamental dichotomy between the coast and the inland. This crude folk classification does capture the significant differences between maritime and terrestrial environments, but it glides over the important variations found in each zone. Furthermore, with respect to our focus – the archaeology of the inland – the dichotomy is not informative as to what constitutes the boundary of the ‘inland’ relative to the ‘coast’. Such bounding, of course, is primarily a matter of cultural perception, so we need to address how we have drawn our imaginary limits to our study area. In this chapter we first outline the primary physical and climatic parameters of the region, which underlie the common perceptions of coast/inland contrasts. We then focus in on the two areas which have framed the research of the LARM project (Landscape and Resource Management in Interior Arctic Norway 2500 BC-AD 1000 – see Chapter 1, this volume): Troms and Finnmark counties. For each county we consider important local variations in topography and ecosystems, the current vegetation and faunal distributions, and the availability of lithic raw materials of relevance to prehistoric peoples. This overview provides a general orientation for the reader, relevant to early modern times and at least as far back as the Middle Ages.

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Citation

Blankholm, Hans Peter; Hood, Bryan C.. Modern Ecological Structure and Lithic Resources of Northern Norway. Archaeological Perspectives on Hunter-Gatherer Landscapes and Resource Management in Interior North Norway. Equinox eBooks Publishing, United Kingdom. p. 113-141 Dec 2024. ISBN 9781781798171. https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/view-chapter/?id=33992. Date accessed: 21 Nov 2024 doi: 10.1558/equinox.33992. Dec 2024

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