Tyler A. Beeton
Colorado State University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Tyler A. Beeton.
Human Ecology | 2015
Kathleen A. Galvin; Tyler A. Beeton; Randall B. Boone; Shauna BurnSilver
This study assesses the nutritional status of Maasai pastoralists living in a period of great social, economic and ecological changes in Kajiado County, southern Kenya. Data on weight, height, skinfolds, and circumferences were collected from 534 individuals in the year 2000. The data were used to describe mean differences in human nutrition between ages, sexes, and within and among three Group Ranches. Nutritional data and diet recall data were compared with past studies of Maasai nutrition from 1930 to 2000. Results indicate that nutritional status is poor and has remained so despite numerous changes to the social-ecological system including livelihood diversification, sedentarization, human population growth and decreased access to vegetation heterogeneity. Imbirikani Group Ranch had better access to infrastructure and markets and some measures of nutritional status were better than for individuals in other group ranches. However, nutritional status remains poor despite transitioning to greater market integration.
Weather, Climate, and Society | 2016
Shannon M. McNeeley; Tyler A. Beeton; Dennis Ojima
AbstractDrought is a natural part of the historical climate variability in the northern Rocky Mountains and high plains region of the United States. However, recent drought impacts and climate change projections have increased the need for a systematized way to document and understand drought in a manner that is meaningful to public land and resource managers. The purpose of this exploratory study was to characterize the ways in which some federal and tribal natural resource managers experienced and dealt with drought on lands managed by the U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI) and tribes in two case site examples (northwest Colorado and southwest South Dakota) that have experienced high drought exposure in the last two decades. The authors employed a social–ecological system framework, whereby key informant interviews and local and regional drought indicator data were used characterize the social and ecological factors that contribute to drought vulnerability and the ways in which drought onset, persist...
Journal of Human Evolution | 2017
Kathryn E. Fitzsimmons; Radu Iovita; Tobias Sprafke; Michelle Glantz; Sahra Talamo; Katharine Horton; Tyler A. Beeton; Saya Alipova; Galymzhan Bekseitov; Yerbolat Ospanov; Jean Marc Deom; Renato Sala; Zhaken Taimagambetov
Central Asia has delivered significant paleoanthropological discoveries in the past few years. New genetic data indicate that at least two archaic human species met and interbred with anatomically modern humans as they arrived into northern Central Asia. However, data are limited: known archaeological sites with lithic assemblages generally lack human fossils, and consequently identifying the archaeological signatures of different human groups, and the timing of their occupation, remains elusive. Reliable chronologic data from sites in the region, crucial to our understanding of the timing and duration of interactions between different human species, are rare. Here we present chronologies for two open air Middle to Upper Palaeolithic (UP) sequences from the Tien Shan piedmont in southeast Kazakhstan, Maibulak and Valikhanova, which bridge southern and northern Central Asia. The chronologies, based on both quartz optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) and polymineral post-infrared infrared luminescence (pIR-IRSL) protocols, demonstrate that technological developments at the two sites differ substantially over the ∼47-19 ka time span. Some of the innovations typically associated with the earliest UP in the Altai or other parts of northeast Asia are also present in the Tien Shan piedmont. We caution against making assumptions about the directionality of spread of these technologies until a larger, better defined database of transitional sites in the region is available. Connections between the timing of occupation of regions, living area setting and paleoenvironmental conditions, while providing hypotheses worth exploring, remain inconclusive. We cautiously suggest a trend towards increasing occupation of open air sites across the Central Asian piedmont after ∼40 ka, corresponding to more humid climatic conditions which nevertheless included pulses of dust deposition. Human occupation persisted into the Last Glacial Maximum, despite cooler, and possibly drier, conditions. Our results thus provide additional data to substantiate arguments for occupation of Central Asia.
Ecology and Society | 2017
Tyler A. Beeton; Kathleen A. Galvin
The use of biomass for wood-based bioenergy (WBB) has been argued as a mechanism to mitigate the impacts of climate change, reduce vulnerability to disturbance events such as fires, and to enhance rural socioeconomic development. Yet, WBB development is characterized by a multitude of feedstock sources, bioenergy pathways, scales, and end uses, the feasibility of which is contingent upon place-based and context-specific social and environmental factors. We present an exploratory case study that draws on key informant interviews among a cohort of diverse stakeholders in rural western Montana forest communities, which was informed by a social-ecological systems framework and resilience thinking from a social science lens. The purpose of this paper is the following: (a) to document the ways in which key informants define the opportunities and constraints associated with WBB in local contexts; and (b) to understand how, and under what contexts, WBB can contribute to forest and community resilience under change. Interviews were analyzed using a modified grounded theory approach, and supplemented by document analysis. Results illustrate the ways in which historical contingencies (i.e., path dependence), individual and group values, and social context can affect the capacity to implement WBB projects. Results also help identify multiple perspectives and trade-offs, which can provide a step toward identifying the most desirable and plausible options for WBB development. As such, these lessons can be used as a starting point to help determine WBB development pathways that contribute to the social and ecological resilience of local places and people under change.
Encyclopedia of Biodiversity (Second Edition) | 2013
Kathleen A. Galvin; Tyler A. Beeton
A hunter-gatherer or foraging society is a group of people whose livelihood is based on the hunting (or fishing) of animals and gathering of plants. Whether or not foragers have an impact on their environment depends on several factors, some of which emanate from foragers themselves and others which are external to their society.
Journal of Biogeography | 2014
Tyler A. Beeton; Michelle Glantz; Anna K. Trainer; Sayat Temirbekov; Robin M. Reich
Quaternary International | 2016
Michelle Glantz; Adam Van Arsdale; Sayat Temirbekov; Tyler A. Beeton
Climate Risk Management | 2017
Shannon M. McNeeley; Trevor L. Even; John B.M. Gioia; Corrine N. Knapp; Tyler A. Beeton
Ecology and Society | 2018
Kathleen A. Galvin; Tyler A. Beeton; Matthew W. Luizza
Climate Risk Management | 2018
Tyler A. Beeton; Shannon M. McNeeley; Brian W. Miller; Dennis Ojima