![]() |
| Researchers work on excavation at the Upward Sun River site in Alaska [Credit: Ben Potter/UAF] |
"Salmon fishing has deep roots, and we now know that salmon have been consumed by North American humans at least 11,500 years ago," said lead author Carrin Halffman, a UAF anthropologist who helped analyze the fish bones with co-authors Brian Kemp of Washington State University, Potter and others.
![]() |
| A salmon bone is shown as it is excavated from the Upward Sun River site in Alaska [Credit: Ben Potter/UAF] |
Ancient DNA and stable isotope analysis verified the fish remains as sea-run chum salmon that migrated upriver some 1,400 kilometers from where the mouth of the Yukon River now exists. These analyses indicate that modern salmon migrations may have ancient roots, dating back to at least the end of the last Ice Age.
![]() |
| Salmon bone specimens from the Upward Sun River site in Alaska [Credit: Ben Potter/UAF] |
The salmon were found in an ancient cooking hearth in a residential structure. Fish remains pose a challenge to archaeologists because their bones are very small and fragile and typically do not preserve well. Because of these challenges, their remains are likely underrepresented in global archaeological studies and findings.
The findings show that ancient Beringian diets were broader than earlier thought and that Ice Age humans used complex strategies and specialized technology to obtain their food, Potter said. He also noted that there is no evidence to suggest that salmons runs weren't also present in the area a few thousand years prior to the time when people were living at the Upward Sun River site. "This suggests that salmon fishing may have played a role in the early human colonization of North America."
Author: Naomi Horne | Source: University of Alaska Fairbanks [September 21, 2015]








