Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Opportunistic Whale Hunting on the Southern Northwest Coast: Ancient DNA, Artifact, and Ethnographic Evidence

View through CrossRef
Two modes of whale use have been documented on the Northwest Coast of North America, namely systematic whale hunting and whale scavenging. Ethnographically, systematic hunting was practiced only by Native groups of southwestern Vancouver Island and the northern Olympic Peninsula of Washington State. This hunting was undertaken with technology specifically designed for the task. Other groups on the Northwest Coast reportedly did not hunt whales but did utilize beached animals. Here we present archaeological evidence of whaling from the northern Oregon coast site of Par-Tee in the form of a bone point lodged in a whale phalange. This hunting likely occurred 1,300 to 1,600 years ago. Ancient DNA extracted from the phalange proves it to be a humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae). DNA recovered from the bone point indicates that it is made from elk (Cervus elaphus) bone, and the point's DNA sequence is identical to that from unmodified elk bone from Par-Tee, suggesting the whale was locally hunted. We present ethnohistoric data from the southern Northwest Coast describing opportunistic whale hunting with a variety of technologies. We argue that many groups along the west coast of North America likely occasionally hunted whales in the past and that this hunting occurred using nonspecialized technologies.
Title: Opportunistic Whale Hunting on the Southern Northwest Coast: Ancient DNA, Artifact, and Ethnographic Evidence
Description:
Two modes of whale use have been documented on the Northwest Coast of North America, namely systematic whale hunting and whale scavenging.
Ethnographically, systematic hunting was practiced only by Native groups of southwestern Vancouver Island and the northern Olympic Peninsula of Washington State.
This hunting was undertaken with technology specifically designed for the task.
Other groups on the Northwest Coast reportedly did not hunt whales but did utilize beached animals.
Here we present archaeological evidence of whaling from the northern Oregon coast site of Par-Tee in the form of a bone point lodged in a whale phalange.
This hunting likely occurred 1,300 to 1,600 years ago.
Ancient DNA extracted from the phalange proves it to be a humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae).
DNA recovered from the bone point indicates that it is made from elk (Cervus elaphus) bone, and the point's DNA sequence is identical to that from unmodified elk bone from Par-Tee, suggesting the whale was locally hunted.
We present ethnohistoric data from the southern Northwest Coast describing opportunistic whale hunting with a variety of technologies.
We argue that many groups along the west coast of North America likely occasionally hunted whales in the past and that this hunting occurred using nonspecialized technologies.

Related Results

Diversity and life-cycle analysis of Pacific Ocean zooplankton by video microscopy and DNA barcoding: Crustacea
Diversity and life-cycle analysis of Pacific Ocean zooplankton by video microscopy and DNA barcoding: Crustacea
Determining the DNA sequencing of a small element in the mitochondrial DNA (DNA barcoding) makes it possible to easily identify individuals of different larval stages of marine cru...
'Whaling and the Extermination of the Great Whale': Norwegian and British Debate about Whale Stocks in Antarctica, 1913-1939
'Whaling and the Extermination of the Great Whale': Norwegian and British Debate about Whale Stocks in Antarctica, 1913-1939
This article examines Norwegian and British investigations of the threat of Antarctic whale extinction in the interwar period. At the time, whaling fleets hunted populations of hun...
‘The Farm Beneath the Sand’ – an archaeological case study on ancient ‘dirt’ DNA
‘The Farm Beneath the Sand’ – an archaeological case study on ancient ‘dirt’ DNA
AbstractIt is probable that ‘The Farm Beneath the Sand’ will come to stand for a revolution in archaeological investigation. The authors show that a core of soil from an open field...
A Whale of a Difference: Southern Right Whale Culture and the Tasman World's Living Terrain of Encounter
A Whale of a Difference: Southern Right Whale Culture and the Tasman World's Living Terrain of Encounter
This article examines the cross-cultural histories that developed around the bay whale fisheries of the Tasman World (Australia and New Zealand) in the early nineteenth century. Us...
How the Coast Became High: An Historical Introduction to the High Coast (Hoega kusten) World Heritage Site in Sweden
How the Coast Became High: An Historical Introduction to the High Coast (Hoega kusten) World Heritage Site in Sweden
The purpose of the present article is to investigate the 'career' of the High Coast as landscape. The High Coast in north-eastern Sweden has become a popular tourist site annually ...
Detection of whale calls in noise: Performance comparison between a beluga whale, human listeners, and a neural network
Detection of whale calls in noise: Performance comparison between a beluga whale, human listeners, and a neural network
This article examines the masking by anthropogenic noise of beluga whale calls. Results from human masking experiments and a software backpropagation neural network are compared to...

Back to Top