Pre-colonial (A.D. 1100-1600) sedimentation related to prehistoric maize agriculture and climate change in eastern North America
Pre-colonial (A.D. 1100-1600) sedimentation related to prehistoric maize agriculture and climate change in eastern North America
Geology (Boulder) (April 2011) 39 (4): 363-366
- agriculture
- archaeology
- case studies
- Cenozoic
- climate change
- Delaware River basin
- Eastern U.S.
- floodplains
- fluvial features
- Holocene
- human activity
- land use
- Medieval Warm Period
- Neoglacial
- North America
- paleoclimatology
- paleoecology
- Pennsylvania
- Pike County Pennsylvania
- Quaternary
- sedimentation
- sediments
- United States
- upper Holocene
- Zea mays
Despite the importance of understanding the effect of land use on floodplains in eastern North America, few studies have directly addressed the possibility and extent of prehistoric indigenous land use on floodplain development. Here we report geoarchaeological evidence of increasing floodplain sedimentation and prehistoric land-use intensification in the Delaware River Valley (eastern United States) during the Medieval Climate Anomaly-Little Ice Age transition. The evidence of this anthropogenic sedimentation event, documented throughout eastern North America, is designated here as pre-colonial sediment (PCS), ca. A.D. 1100-1600. The data demonstrate that the combined effects of prehistoric land use and climate change affected eastern North American floodplain development several hundred years prior to the onset of major European settlement.