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Severe Little Ice Age drought in the midcontinental United States during the Mississippian abandonment of Cahokia. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Drought may have contributed to the abandonment of pre-Columbian Native American settlements in the midcontinental U.S. between 1350 and 1450 CE.
  • A detailed oxygen isotope record from Horseshoe Lake in Illinois shows increased evaporation and lower effective moisture during this time, correlating with the decline of Cahokia.
  • This research underscores the significant impact of climate and drought on ancient agricultural societies in the region, indicating current vulnerabilities to similar hydroclimatic extremes.

Article Abstract

Drought has long been suspected as playing an important role in the abandonment of pre-Columbian Native American settlements across the midcontinental United States between 1350 and 1450 CE. However, high-resolution paleoclimatic reconstructions reflecting local effective moisture (the ratio of precipitation to evaporation) that are located in proximity to Mississippi period (1050-1450 CE) population centers are lacking. Here, we present a 1600-year-long decadally resolved oxygen isotope (δO) record from Horseshoe Lake (Collinsville, IL), an evaporatively influenced oxbow lake that is centrally located within the largest and mostly densely populated series of Mississippian settlements known as Greater Cahokia. A shift to higher δO in the Horseshoe Lake sediment record from 1200 to 1400 CE indicates that strongly evaporative conditions (i.e., low effective moisture) were persistent during the leadup to Cahokia's abandonment. These results support the hypothesis that climate, and drought specifically, strongly impacted agriculturally based pre-Columbian Native American cultures in the midcontinental US and highlights the susceptibility of this region, presently a global food production center, to hydroclimate extremes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8257696PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-92900-xDOI Listing

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