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Pre-Columbian Archaeology of North America

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Located in the Mojave Desert of California. Excavated by Louis Leakey and Mary ... Excavated at nearby site of Bluefish Cave. Also claimed as early site ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pre-Columbian Archaeology of North America


1
Pre-Columbian Archaeology of North America
  • Week 4
  • The Peopling of the New WorldNew
    Interpretations

2
Challenges to the Clovis-first theory
  • Calico Mountains (California)
  • Old Crow (Yukon, Canada)
  • Meadowcroft Cave (Pennsylvania)

3
Calico Mountains - Background
  • Located in the Mojave Desert of California
  • Excavated by Louis Leakey and Mary Simpson in the
    late 1950s through 1983
  • Site located in alluvial fan
  • Fan dated using the uranium-thorium dating
    (U234?Th230) method to 193-260 kya
  • Extensive amounts of lithic materials recovered
  • 800 purported stone tools
  • 60,000 flakes
  • Charcoal recovered
  • At least one stone circle also found
  • Reported to be a hearth

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4
Alluvial Fan
5
Calico Mountains - Problems
  • Lithic materials appear to be the result of
    natural percussion (rocks rolling down the slope
    of the alluvial fan and banging into each other)
  • Flakes show that the angle between the bulb of
    percussion and the striking platform is more than
    90, a sign that the percussion is the result of
    natural processes.
  • Human knapping produces an angle of less than 90
  • Tools are mostly classified as choppers (Early
    Paleolithic technology)
  • Charcoal and stone circles appear to be the
    result of a combination of natural forest fires
    burning tree stumps on the slope and stones
    rolling down the fan.
  • Stones will naturally form circles around these
    stumps (either before or after they have burned)
  • Generally rejected as a site showing evidence for
    early human occupation of the Americas

N
6
Flakes and Cores
7
Old Crow Site
  • Site along Old Crow River in northern Yukon
    territory
  • Excavated by W. N. Irving of the University of
    Toronto in the mid to late 1980s
  • Artifacts are primarily bone
  • More than 10,000
  • Primarily horse and mammoth
  • Bone-tool industry
  • Radiocarbon dating on bone and charcoal
  • c. 20,000 27,000 BP
  • Dates claimed as early as 100,000 BP
  • Criticisms
  • Are bone tools actually the product of human
    manufacture
  • Taphonomic modification by natural processes
    along the river bank
  • Rolling, splintering, impacts resulting from
    collisions with rocks in river bed
  • High energy stream
  • Problems with radiocarbon (C-14) dating
  • Contaminated samples
  • Materials probably late Pleistocene (c. 10-12,000
    BP)
  • Rejected as providing clear evidence of early
    entry

N
8
Old Crow Site profile
9
Bone tool industry
  • Excavated at nearby site of Bluefish Cave
  • Also claimed as early site
  • This artifact from stratum dated to 25,000 BP
  • Good evidence for late Pleistocene arrival
  • Dates c. 13,000 BP
  • Validity of early evidence question

10
Old Crow River
11
Old Crow River Basin
12
Meadowcroft Rockshelter
  • Excavated in the 1970s
  • James Adovasio
  • Extremely careful and meticulous excavations
  • Rockshelter located in SW Pennsylvania
  • Long-term occupation documented in 11 strata
    covering at least 700 12,000 BP
  • Lowest strata
  • Radiocarbon dated to 19,600 B.P. /- 2400
  • In association with clear human artifacts
  • Unlike other sites, no clear stratigraphic
    problems

N
13
A View of Meadowcroft Rockshelter
14
Meadowcroft Excavations
  • Lowest levels in the area known as the Hole

15
Meadowcroft Tools
16
Meadowcroft Problems
  • Rockshelter occurs in area naturally rich in coal
    deposits and with a high water table
  • Coal particles may have seeped into the site
    contaminating radiocarbon samples
  • This explanation was championed by C. Vance
    Haynes, leading American Paleo-Indian specialist
  • Unresolved

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17
Problems with Clovis
  • If Clovis represents industry produced by first
    humans in the Americas AND
  • If humans arrived in the Americas across
    Beringia, THEN
  • Analogous industries should exist in this period
    (pre-12,000 BP) in Siberia
  • Large blades, bifacial retouch, etc.
  • No such industries exist in Siberia
  • This period in Siberia and east Asia is dominated
    by micro-blade industries
  • Existence of ice-free corridor between glaciers
    challenged
  • Challenge comes from geology
  • Conditions between 21,000 and 12,000 BP would
    probably not have allowed for travel
  • Cold, semi-arid steppe with scant precipitation
    and only 10-25 percent of the land bearing sparse
    grass and sagebrush, a rock-desert tundra where
    mammals and birds were rare because of the
    extremely low biomass

N
18
Ice-Free Corridor
19
Monte Verde
  • Located in southern Chile
  • Excavated between 1979 and late 1990s
  • Tom Dillehay
  • Water-logged site
  • Excellent preservation of normally perishable
    items
  • Wood
  • Footprints
  • Plant fibers
  • Bone
  • Relatively little lithic technology
  • Not unusual for region
  • Radiocarbon dating 13,000 BP
  • Also claims of artifacts dating to c. 30,000 BP

N
20
Monte Verde location
21
Monte Verde Description
  • Hundreds of artifacts. In addition to several
    kinds of stone tools, a wide variety of wooden
    artifacts were found including digging sticks,
    spears, and a mortar. Artifacts made from stone
    were also recovered including spherical stones
    with an encircling groove. These may have been
    used as bola stones, a South American throwing
    weapon with 3 leather thongs weighted at each
    end. The bola is thrown in a spinning fashion and
    the stone weights wrap the thongs around the
    prey. Also artifacts such as a gouge made from
    mastodon ivory.
  • Wooden house foundations. The timber and earthen
    foundations of at least 12 structures were
    preserved at the site. The foundations, made of
    logs and planks held in place with stakes of a
    different type of wood, supported rooms 3 to 4
    meters long on each side. At intervals along the
    foundation timbers upright posts were placed to
    support a sapling framework, which was covered by
    animal skins. Small pieces of what may be animal
    hide were preserved next to the timber
    foundation.
  • Food plants. Plants were extremely important in
    the diet of the Monte Verde people. Some 42
    edible species of plants have been identified at
    the site, including wild potatoes, bamboos,
    mushrooms, juncus seeds, berries from various
    plants, nuts, and fruits. Also, because many of
    these plants are from species that ripen
    throughout the year, it's likely that the site
    was occupied year-round. Further evidence of the
    important of plants in the diet of the Monte
    Verde people is the large numbers of grinding
    stones found there.
  • Exotics. A wide variety of items not locally
    available were imported by the Monte Verde
    people plants, beach-rolled pebbles, quartz, and
    bitumen (an adhesive tar).
  • Medicine plants. The remains of some 22 species
    of plants were recovered from the site analysis
    revealed them to be non-food types but identical
    to plants used today by local native peoples in
    curing.
  • Meat. Animals bones were well preserved. Most
    came from mastodons. One of the bones still had a
    piece of meat attached to it.
  • Human footprint. Preserved in the sandy mud, only
    about five inches long, it was probably made by a
    child.

N
22
Monte Verde artifacts (1)
  • Tent stakes
  • Bits of animal skin attached

23
Monte Verde artifacts (2)
24
Monte Verde artifacts (3)
  • Footprint
  • 15 cm long
  • Childs

25
Monte Verde artifacts (4)
26
Monte Verde Reconstruction
27
Monte Verde Conclusions
  • Solid evidence for human occupation of southern
    South America at the time first humans arriving
    in the Americas according to the Clovis Theory
  • Monte Verde was not occupied by big-game hunters
    but rather broad-spectrum hunter/gatherers with a
    decided marine focus
  • Dillehay cautious about earliest dates.
  • Challenges to Monte Verde (C. V. Haynes and
    others)
  • Lack of lithic technology
  • Poor excavation techniques, lack of stratigraphy
    etc.
  • Rebutted by visits to site (à la the Folsom and
    Clovis sites)

28
Coastal Entry Model
  • Monte Verde (and other evidence) led to a
    reevaluation of the traditional Clovis/Beringia
    Theories
  • Coastal entry proposed
  • First proposed by Knut Fladmark (U. of British
    Columbia) in the 1970s
  • Using boats
  • Technology was known
  • Settlement of Australia c. 50,000 BP (Lake Mungo)
  • Moved along coastline of Asia and the Americas
    (the Pacific Rim)
  • Sites would have mostly been lost as ocean levels
    rose at end of Pleistocene
  • Increasing numbers of human remains that are
    clearly pre-Clovis

N
29
Coastal entry map
30
Pre-Clovis Human Remains
  • Kennewick Man
  • Arlington Springs Woman
  • Spirit Cave Man
  • Luiza
  • Peñon Woman
  • Buhl Woman

N
31
Kennewick Man
  • Discovered in Columbia River at Kennewick,
    Washington
  • Nearly complete skeleton
  • Male
  • 40-55 years of age
  • 170-175 cm tall
  • Flattened skull (cradleboard)
  • Radiocarbon dates 8410 /- 60 B.P.
  • Not similar to modern Native American populations
  • The skull is dolichocranic (cranial index 73.8)
    rather than brachycranic, the face narrow and
    prognathous rather than broad and flat.
  • Modern aboriginal populations in North America
    tend to have shorter, broad heads and broad, flat
    faces
  • Cheek bones recede slightly and lack an inferior
    zygomatic projection the lower rim of the orbit
    is even with the upper.
  • Other features are a long, broad nose that
    projects markedly from the face and high, round
    orbits.  The mandible is v-shaped,with a
    pronounced, deep chin.   Many of these
    characteristics are definitive of modern-day
    caucasoid peoples, while others, such as the
    orbits are typical of neither race.  Dental
    characteristics fit Turner's (1983) Sundadont 
    pattern, indicating possible relationship to
    south Asian peoples. 
  • Initial media reports called him Caucasian but
    further analysis shows a close relationship to
    other east/south Asian peoples such as the Ainu

32
Kennewick Man skull
33
Arlington Springs Woman
  • Santa Rosa Island (Channel Islands) off the coast
    of California
  • Original excavations in 1959/60
  • Two femurs and partial humerus recovered
  • Female estimated to have been between 150-157 cm
    tall
  • Recently new radiocarbon dates ran on bones
  • 13,000 BP (first estimates were only 10,000 BP)
  • DNA testing
  • Restriction analysis of one of the samples
    initially indicated that the mitochondrial DNA of
    Arlington Springs Woman belonged to Haplogroup B
    (one of the five predominant clades of
    mitochondrial DNA lineages found among Native
    Americans).

34
Arlington Springs
35
Spirit Cave Man
  • Partially mummified remains of a man found in
    central Nevada in 1940
  • The hunter survived to his mid-40s.
  • But he had broken his right hand and suffered
    chronic back pain from arthritis, herniated disks
    and a fracture in his spine. A blow to the left
    temple dented and cracked his skull, which had
    just begun to heal when he died, perhaps from
    that injury or the advanced abscesses in his
    upper and lower jaws.
  • He was buried lying on his right side, arm flexed
    so his hand rested beneath the chin, in a shallow
    grave dug in a desert cave.
  • The cave's climate preserved patches of skin and
    reddish-brown shoulder-length hair on the skull,
    making him North America's oldest mummy. Dried
    intestines contained fish bones from a final
    meal.
  • Also preserved were his rabbit fur robe, two
    shrouds of woven tule reeds, and well-worn
    moccasins of three kinds of animal hide, sewn
    with hemp and sinew, and patched on the soles.
  • Recently new radiocarbon dates the skeleton to
    13,300 to 13,100 BP

36
Spirit Cave Reconstruction
37
Luiza
  • Fossilized skull and a third of a skeleton found
    in Lapa Vermelha, Minas Gerais state in Brazil in
    the mid-1970s
  • New radiocarbon dates to 11,500 BP
  • Skull shares features with Australiasian
    populations (modern Aborigines)

38
Peñon Woman III
  • The skull and the almost-complete skeleton of
    Peñon woman was actually unearthed in 1959 and
    was thought to be no older than about 5,000
    years. It formed part of a collection of 27 early
    humans in the National Museum of Anthropology in
    Mexico City that had not been accurately dated
    using the most modern techniques.
  • Re-dated in 2002 to 12,700-13,000 BP
  • Long, narrow skull, short narrow face

39
Skull and reconstruction ofPeñon Woman III
40
Buhl Woman
  • Complete skeleton recovered from gravel quarry in
    1989 in Buhl, Idaho
  • Radiocarbon dating shows minimum date of 10,600 BP

41
Other Pre-Clovis Sites
  • Cactus Hill (Virginia)
  • 16,000 20,000 BP
  • Pentangular points
  • Possibly pre-Clovis
  • Faunal remains
  • Turtle, White-tail deer
  • Many sites in western North America

42
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43
Conclusion
  • It appears likely that human beings arrived in
    the Americas in more than one wave. Possibly two
    or more from Asia
  • 1st prior to LGM (c. 18,000) using a coastal
    route (marine exploitation)
  • May or may not have contributed to later
    Amerindian populations
  • 2nd towards end of the Pleistocene (big-game
    hunters/Clovis)
  • Some have proposed arrivals from Australia (based
    on Luiza) or even Europe
  • Connection with Solutrean technology based on
    similarities in technology
  • Very controversial
  • Creates a new picture

44
Solutrean-Clovis Comparison
  • This link is apparent in the early stages of
    Clovis point manufacture which were accomplished
    by removing large, flat percussion flakes from a
    biface. These flakes left scars that extended
    past the middle of the face of the biface and
    created a platelike biface which is different
    than a biface with a medial ridge. Occasionally,
    these flakes would travel all the way across the
    biface and remove a portion of the edge on the
    far side. In France these flakes that run all the
    way across the biface are known as outre passé
    flakes. Flake scars 1 and 2 in the image are
    examples of outre passé flakes scars.
  • The outrepassé flake is generally associated with
    the Solutrean tradition (17,500 to 19,500 BP) of
    the Upper Paleolithic. The later Solutrean
    (18,000 BP) is even more famous for its
    exquisitely thin bifaces (artifact on the left in
    the image) that were created with the same soft
    hammer percussion technique that the Clovis
    people used.
  • Dennis Stanford (Smithsonian Institution) is the
    leading proponent of this theory

45
Clovis-Solutrean
46
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Clovis/Pre-Clovis bibliography
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    Verde and the antiquity of humankind in the
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    Meadowcroft Rockshelter. Science 239713-714.
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    R.1990 The Meadowcroft Rockshelter radiocarbon
    chronology 1975-1990. American Antiquity
    55(2)348-354.
  • Adovasio, J. M., Donahue, J., and Stuckenrath,
    R.1992 Never say never again Some thoughts on
    could haves and might have beens. American
    Antiquity 57(2)327-331.
  • Bonnichsen, R. and Steele, D. G.1994 Introducing
    First Americans research. In Method and Theory
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    edited by Bonnichsen, R. and Steele, D. G., pp.
    1-6. Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon.
  • Chappell, J., Head, J., and Magee, J.1996 Beyond
    the radiocarbon limit in Australian archaeology
    and Quaternary research. Antiquity 70543-552.
  • Chrisman, D., MacNeish, R. S., Mavalwala, J., and
    Savage, H.1996 Late Pleistocene human friction
    skin prints from Pendejo Cave, New Mexico.
    American Antiquity 61(2)357-376.
  • Dillehay, Thomas D.1992 Earliest hunters and
    gatherers of South America. Journal of World
    Prehistory 6(2)145-203.1989 Monte Verde A
    Late Pleistocene Settlement in Chile. ed.
    Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington.
  • Dillehay, Thomas D. and Collins, M.1988 Early
    cultural evidence from Monte Verde in Chile.
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  • Dillehay, Thomas D. and Meltzer, David J.1991
    Peopling of the New World problems, processes
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    in World Archaeology 3275-323.
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    Where to Look for Him Geomorphic Contexts.
    Plains Anthropologist 24(86)269-281.
  • Engelbrecht, W. E. and Seyfert, C. K.1994
    Paleoindian watercraft Evidence and
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    15(3)221-234.
  • Ferring, C. Reid1994 The role of geoarchaeology
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  • Fiedel, Stuart J.1999 Older than we thought
    Implications of corrected dates for Paleoindians.
    American Antiquity 64(1)95-115.
  • 2000 The peopling of the new world Present
    evidence, new theories, and future directions.
    Journal of Archaeological Research 8(1)39-103.
  • Goddard, I. and Campbell, L.1994 The history and
    classification of American Indian languages What
    are the implications for the peopling of the
    Americas? In Method and Theory for Investigating
    the Peopling of the Americas., edited by
    Bonnichsen, R. and Steele, D. G., pp. 189-207.
    Oregon State University, Corvallis.
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    Americas. Stanford University Press, Stanford
    California.
  • Gruhn, Ruth1994 The Pacific Coast route of
    initial entry An overview. In Method and Theory
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    249-256. Oregon State University , Corvallis,
    Oregon.

48
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    Oregon State University , Corvallis,
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    single wave of migration for the New World.
    98411-430.
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    Corvalis, Oregon

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49
North America
  • Calico (CA)
  • Old Crow (YU)
  • Meadowcroft (PA)
  • Kennewick (WA)
  • Santa Rosa Island (CA)
  • Spirit Cave (NV)
  • Peñon Woman (Mexico)
  • Buhl (ID)

50
South America
  • Monte Verde (Chile)
  • Lapa Vermelha (Brazil)

51
finis
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