This thesis has two overarching goals. One is to reconstruct human population dynamics in Stone Age Arctic Norway (12.000-2000 cal BP). The other is to explain the demographic changes as population ecological phenomena. Thus conceived, the project is fundamentally engaged in contributing to the Human Ecodynamic research agenda of investigating the co-evolution of human and natural systems. This agenda is operationalized as a set of objectives: • Reconstruct relative population size changes through time. • Compare with relevant palaeoenvironmental records. • Provide detailed case studies of human adaptive responses to ecological change. • Establish middle-range causal mechanisms connecting macro-scale climate forcing with micro-scale human ...
Population size has increasingly been taken as the driver of past human environmental impact worldwi...
Population size has increasingly been taken as the driver of past human environmental impact worldwi...
Summary of the thesis For more than 11,000 years ago, human groups entered and utilized territories...
Most parts of the Circumpolar Arctic have only discontinuous evidence for long-term human settlement...
Most parts of the Circumpolar Arctic have only discontinuous evidence for long-term human settlement...
Most parts of the Circumpolar Arctic have only discontinuous evidence for long-term human settlement...
Most parts of the Circumpolar Arctic have only discontinuous evidence for long-term human settlement...
The human colonization of Norway occurred in the Pleistocene–Holocene transition – one of the most a...
Synchronized demographic and behavioral patterns among distinct populations is a well-known, natural...
Most parts of the Circumpolar Arctic have only discontinuous evidence for long-term human settlement...
Most parts of the Circumpolar Arctic have only discontinuous evidence for long-term human settlement...
Most parts of the Circumpolar Arctic have only discontinuous evidence for long-term human settlement...
This paper explores environmental variations in time and space, adaptive strategies and possible cul...
Most parts of the Circumpolar Arctic have only discontinuous evidence for long-term human settlement...
This paper explores environmental variations in time and space, adaptive strategies and possible cul...
Population size has increasingly been taken as the driver of past human environmental impact worldwi...
Population size has increasingly been taken as the driver of past human environmental impact worldwi...
Summary of the thesis For more than 11,000 years ago, human groups entered and utilized territories...
Most parts of the Circumpolar Arctic have only discontinuous evidence for long-term human settlement...
Most parts of the Circumpolar Arctic have only discontinuous evidence for long-term human settlement...
Most parts of the Circumpolar Arctic have only discontinuous evidence for long-term human settlement...
Most parts of the Circumpolar Arctic have only discontinuous evidence for long-term human settlement...
The human colonization of Norway occurred in the Pleistocene–Holocene transition – one of the most a...
Synchronized demographic and behavioral patterns among distinct populations is a well-known, natural...
Most parts of the Circumpolar Arctic have only discontinuous evidence for long-term human settlement...
Most parts of the Circumpolar Arctic have only discontinuous evidence for long-term human settlement...
Most parts of the Circumpolar Arctic have only discontinuous evidence for long-term human settlement...
This paper explores environmental variations in time and space, adaptive strategies and possible cul...
Most parts of the Circumpolar Arctic have only discontinuous evidence for long-term human settlement...
This paper explores environmental variations in time and space, adaptive strategies and possible cul...
Population size has increasingly been taken as the driver of past human environmental impact worldwi...
Population size has increasingly been taken as the driver of past human environmental impact worldwi...
Summary of the thesis For more than 11,000 years ago, human groups entered and utilized territories...