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PhD defence

Sea level rise and a Florida mortuary pond

  • M.R. Price
Date
Wednesday 29 November 2023
Time
Location
Academy Building
Rapenburg 73
2311 GJ Leiden

Supervisor(s)

  • Prof.dr. C.L. Hofman
  • Prof.dr. C.F.T. Andrus (University Of Alabama)
  • dr. R.M. Duggins (Florida Bureau Of Archaeological Research)

Summary

The world is a changing landscape, and the coasts were not always in their current locations. Thousands of years ago, sea level rise inundated portions of land that were once exposed, meaning past populations inhabited landscapes that are now underwater. The Manasota Key Offshore archaeological site (Florida, USA) is a mortuary pond dated to 7214 ± 30 cal BP and consisting of modified wooden stakes and human burials preserved in peat. At the time, this freshwater pond was located inland of the coast and used as a place of interment by Florida’s indigenous population. Over the intervening years, sea levels altered the landscape and affected the mortuary pond, which is now in an offshore context. Archaeological excavations revealed oysters (Crassostrea virginica) attached to human skeletal and cultural material— a direct line of evidence of past sea level rise. Morphometric analysis, sclerochronology, radiocarbon dating, and stable isotope analysis of eight oysters demonstrated there were two distinct environments at the time of oyster growth, each representing separate time periods and water parameters. The earlier oyster group indicated fresher water parameters, and the later hinted at hypersaline conditions. Oysters expired at ages between one and three, suggesting delicate human skeletal material was exposed to the water column for equally as long and yet remained preserved. This is the first time oysters attached to Archaic period skeletal material were used to draw wider conclusions about past marine transgression and environmental change. Results illustrate that oysters contain valuable information for investigation at drowned archaeological sites.

PhD dissertations

Approximately one week after the defence, PhD dissertations by Leiden PhD students are available digitally through the Leiden Repository, that offers free access to these PhD dissertations. Please note that in some cases a dissertation may be under embargo temporarily and access to its full-text version will only be granted later.

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