Early Northwest Interior Culture (Précis, Chapter 13)
Early Northwest Interior culture is a
tentative cultural construct. It could even be called a classificatory
'catch-all' bred of archaeological desperation. The nature of the
archaeological evidence makes it difficult to determine if there is
one or two or more distinct cultures in the region. A range of factors
have coalesced to insure an exceptional poverty of clear archaeological
evidence. Early Northwest Interior culture may have been initially
represented by a technology with bifacially flaked tools but lacking a
microblade technology called Northern Cordilleran
(Clark 1991). Microblade
technology was adopted later from the west, except in the northern Yukon
where it was probably present at a very early date
(Cinq-Mars 1990). There is the
problem of whether the movement of microblade technology out of Alaska
into the Yukon Territory, the western portion of the Mackenzie District
of the Northwest Territories, and northern British Columbia, represented
an actual movement of people bearing a distinctive culture or was simply
microblade technology being adopted by indigenous populations. There is
the additional problem of whether, in many instances, the absence of
microblade technology reflects specific site function where microblades
were not required rather than evidence of a culture lacking microblade
technology. As has been aptly noted "...the logical and probable
existence of Northwest Microblade tradition sites without microblades is
an insidious problem inasmuch as identification of this tradition is
dependent on the recovery of microblades or cores"
(Clark 1987: 167). The mixture of
traits also causes classification problems. The Tuktu complex of the
Brooks Range of northern Alaska
(Campbell 1962) "...could be
classified as early Northern Archaic, as a regional form of the
Northwest Microblade tradition, or as a later development out of Denali
and the Paleo-Arctic tradition ..."
(Clark 1981: 113). Certainly the
almost whimsical presence and absence and disappearance and reappearance
of microblades throughout much of the archaeological record of the
region would suggest that this particular element of technology can be
quite untrustworthy as a cultural diagnostic
(Clark 1983: 11;
Morlan and Cinq-Mars 1982:
373). On the other hand, the complex demands made on the tool manufacturer
during the production of microblades, not to mention their associated
composite tool organic hafting elements, would imply that the knowledge
to produce microblades must have been a highly integrated element within
a culture's technology. Following a personal inclination to favour
diffusion as a major cause of cultural change rather than population
replacement in northern environs, a scenario that envisions an initial
occupation of the region by the Northern Cordilleran complex, with its
Nenana-Chindadn complex/Palaeo-Indian relationships, onto which microblade
technology was grafted at a later date, is favoured albeit with some
trepidation. In this respect the Northern Cordilleran complex would
represent the earlier manifestation of Early Northwest Interior cultural
development while the microblade component would represent a later
attribute of the same culture. These developments carried into Period III.
While it would have been a simpler matter to have argued for the
existence of an early culture lacking microblades (Northern Cordilleran
complex) followed by a replacing microblade culture (Northwest Microblade
complex) neither the limited evidence nor the economic foundations of
these early northerners support such a descriptively convenient sequence
of population and cultural replacement.
Given the paucity of evidence for Early Northwest Interior culture no
attempt will be made to generalize about the various cultural subsystems
in the précis. Certainly a major factor in this scarcity of
information is that "With a few exceptions, archaeological sites in the
western Subarctic are either small and sparse or involve shallow
multiple occupations, often over large areas, that are disturbed
and mixed through frost action"
(Clark 1981: 107). The situation
has then been compounded by a virtual lack of bone preservation and a
not particularly distinctive chipped stone tool technology.
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