Understanding how humans living in Arctic regions 4,000 to 6,000 years ago reacted to climate changes could help contemporary societies better deal with global warming, maintains University at Buffalo (N.Y.) anthropologist Ezra Zubrow, who is working with teams of scientists from St. James Bay, Quebec, northern Finland, and Kamchatka, Russia.

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Understanding how humans living in Arctic regions 4,000 to 6,000 years ago reacted to climate changes could help contemporary societies better deal with global warming, maintains University at Buffalo (N.Y.) anthropologist Ezra Zubrow, who is working with teams of scientists from St. James Bay, Quebec, northern Finland, and Kamchatka, Russia. "The circumpolar north is widely seen as an observatory for changing relations between human...

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