Northwestern North America (28,577 – 7,822 …

Years: 28577BCE - 7822BCE

Northwestern North America (28,577 – 7,822 BCE) Upper Paleolithic II — Deglaciation Gateways, Coastal Pathways, and Inland Refugia

Geographic and Environmental Context

Northwestern North America includes Alaskawestern Canada (Alberta, British Columbia, Yukon and Northwest territory and Nunavut west of 110°W) Alaska, Washington State, northern Idaho, and the northwestern portions of Montana, Oregon, and California.

Anchors: the Bering Strait & Seward PeninsulaBrooks Range & North SlopeYukon–Kuskokwim and Copper–Cook Inlet basins, the Gulf of Alaska & Aleutians, the Inside Passage/Haida Gwaii and outer coast of British Columbia, the Stikine–Skeena–Fraser–Columbia plateaus and canyonsPuget Sound, and the Klamath–Redwood coast of NW California.

  • Deglaciation opened seasonal lanes between the Cordilleran and Laurentide ice sheets late; the Pacific fjord coast developed rich estuaries; interior loess plains greened.

Climate & Environmental Shifts

  • Bølling–Allerød warming (c. 14,700–12,900 BCE) improved forage and river productivity; Younger Dryas (c. 12,900–11,700 BCE) briefly re-invigorated cold, aridity; Early Holocene warmth followed.

Subsistence & Settlement

  • Coastal “kelp highway” foragers harvested kelp-forest fish, shellfish, sea mammals, and seabirds along the Gulf of Alaska–BC archipelagos.

  • Inland, caribou and elk dominated mesas and river crossings; fish (salmon, whitefish) took on growing importance with weirs and traps by the Early Holocene.

  • Camps proliferated on raised marine terraces, river benches, and rock shelters.

Technology & Material Culture

  • Persistent microblade technology; bone harpoons, barbed points; early dugout precursors for nearshore travel.

  • Tailored parkas and waterproof seams (sinew thread, blubber oil dressings) support maritime rounds.

Movement & Interaction Corridors

  • Fjord-by-fjord voyaging stitched Southeast Alaska–Haida Gwaii–Vancouver Island; inland river driftways (Yukon, Upper Fraser) linked plateaus.

Cultural & Symbolic Expressions

  • Red-ochre burials and curated toolkits suggest emergent territorial memory; carved bone/antler animal imagery reflects predator–prey relations.

Environmental Adaptation & Resilience

  • Dual-mobility strategy (coast and interior) ensured redundancy across climatic pulses; seasonal storage of dried fish/oils began to anchor semi-sedentism.

Transition

By 7,822 BCE, salmon estuaries and deglaciated coasts enabled increasingly fish-centered economies while inland big-game pursuits persisted.

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