RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Iarte VI and Late Holocene Reindeer Remains from the Iamal Peninsula of Arctic Siberia JF Arctic Anthropology JO Arctic Anthropol FD University of Wisconsin Press SP 56 OP 75 DO 10.3368/aa.55.2.56 VO 55 IS 2 A1 Tatiana Nomokonova A1 Robert J. Losey A1 Andrei V. Plekhanov A1 Heather J. McIntyre YR 2018 UL http://aa.uwpress.org/content/55/2/56.abstract AB Rangifer tarandus is one of the most important animals for indigenous groups living in the Arctic. This significance is particularly the case in the Iamal Peninsula of the Russian Federation. The Iamal Peninsula has produced a substantial archaeological record of human engagement with reindeer during the Late Holocene period. The archaeological site known as Iarte VI, a multihousepit settlement on the open tundra of the peninsula, has produced the region’s largest and most well-dated reindeer-bone assemblage. This study provides a chronological assessment of Iarte VI based on numerous radiocarbon and dendrochronology dates, an analysis of the site’s large faunal assemblage, and comparison of these remains with those from all other sampled sites on the peninsula. Iarte VI appears to have been a warm-season settlement where reindeer were intensively utilized during the 11th century AD. Other regional sites had broader subsistence practices, but reindeer are nonetheless consistently present.