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Journal article

Paleo-Eskimo kitchen midden preservation in permafrost under future climate conditions at Qajaa, West Greenland

From

University of Copenhagen1

National Museum of Denmark2

University Centre in Svalbard3

Greenland National Museum and Archives4

Geodesy, National Space Institute, Technical University of Denmark5

National Space Institute, Technical University of Denmark6

Remains from Paleo-Eskimo cultures are well-documented, but complete preservation is rare. Two kitchen middens in Greenland are known to hold extremely well-preserved organic artefacts. Here, we assess the fate of the Qajaa site in Western Greenland under future climate conditions based on site characteristics measured in situ and from permafrost cores.

Measurements of thermal properties, heat generation, oxygen consumption and CO2 production show that the kitchen midden can be characterized as peat but produces 4–7 times more heat than natural sediment. An analytical model from permafrost research has been applied to assess future thawing of the midden.

Results show that the preservation conditions are controlled by freezing temperatures and a high water/ice content limiting the subsurface oxygen availability. Threats to the future preservation are related to thawing followed by drainage and increasing subsurface oxygen availability and heat generation.

The model predicts that the unique 4000-year-old Saqqaq layer below more than 1 m of peat is adequately protected against thawing for the next 70 years.

Language: English
Year: 2011
Pages: 1331-1339
ISSN: 10959238 and 03054403
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1016/j.jas.2011.01.011
ORCIDs: 0000-0002-6023-885X and Khan, Shfaqat Abbas

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