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- <text id=93TT1562>
- <title>
- May 03, 1993: Coming To America
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 03, 1993 Tragedy in Waco
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 60
- COMING TO AMERICA
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>When did the first settlers migrate from Asia to the New World?
- Archaeologists now say it may have been tens of thousands of
- years earlier than once thought.
- </p>
- <p>By MICHAEL D. LEMONICK--With reporting by Andrea Dorfman/New
- York and Ian McCluskey/Sao Raimundo Nonato
- </p>
- <p> Know-it-alls are fond of pointing out that the only true
- Americans are the descendants of the diverse tribes found by
- Columbus and Cortes when they first arrived in the New World.
- That's wrong, of course. Even North and South American Indians
- had immigrants for ancestors: northeastern Asians who crossed
- from Siberia to Alaska in prehistoric times across the bridge
- of land that then spanned the Bering Strait.
- </p>
- <p> But when did these adventurous souls reach Alaska? What
- kind of people were they? How fast did they spread down through
- the Americas? For decades, archaeologists felt sure they knew
- the answers: the first Americans were skilled hunter-gatherers
- and toolmakers who arrived about 11,500 years ago and moved
- rapidly southward, reaching deep into South America within about
- five centuries as well as helping drive to extinction such
- prehistoric mammals as mastodons and woolly rhinos.
- </p>
- <p> Now, a competing theory about the original Americans, once
- touted by only a small band of renegade archaeologists, has
- become too compelling to ignore. Its thesis is that the first
- migration took place not 11,500 years ago but 20,000 or 30,000
- or even 50,000 years ago. Although the evidence is still
- sketchy, archaeological digs in Chile, Brazil, Venezuela, the
- U.S. and Canada have yielded tantalizing clues that this radical
- notion might be correct. "This is a hot area of research," says
- Dennis Stanford of the Smithsonian Institution. "Man's origin
- in the New World is one of the major unanswered questions of
- archaeology."
- </p>
- <p> The old assumption that humans arrived in the Americas
- about 11,500 years ago is known as the Clovis hypothesis. The
- name comes from the 1933 discovery of a fluted stone spearpoint
- dated to that era in a pile of mammoth bones near Clovis, New
- Mexico. Over the years, similar spear points were unearthed all
- over North America, all apparently about the same age. Because
- the weapons, known as "Clovis points," were so widespread, and
- because essentially no artifacts at all were found in older
- sediments, archaeologists and anthropologists concluded that the
- Clovis people were the first and that they came over from Asia
- in the last years before melting glaciers and rising sea levels
- submerged the Bering land bridge.
- </p>
- <p> The theory has flaws, though. One is the idea that
- prehistoric people could have populated an entire continent in
- a mere 500 years, the span between the time of the presumed land
- migration and the time by which Clovis spearpoints had been
- deposited throughout North America. Even more problematic are
- signs of very early culture in South America. "Hu mans don't
- sprint through their environment," says Mercyhurst College
- archaeologist James Adovasio. "But that's what the Clovis guys
- would have us believe. There's no analogue for that in
- archaeological history."
- </p>
- <p> More doubts arise from studies of linguistic and genetic
- diversity. Modern North and South American Indian languages
- presumably evolved from a single ancestral tongue, but they
- differ so greatly that it is hard to imagine how this could have
- happened in just a few score centuries. Similarly, the
- mitochondrial DNA in the cells of Native Americans differs so
- much from tribe to tribe that a single, relatively recent
- ancestral group seems unlikely.
- </p>
- <p> Still, if the Clovis people were not first, where is the
- evidence of their pre decessors? According to a growing group
- of archaeologists, the signs of the original Americans can be
- found in several places:
- </p>
- <p> Monte Verde, Chile
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps the most convincing candidate for a pre-Clovis
- site is Monte Verde, on the Chinchihuapi Creek in southern
- Chile. A team led by University of Kentucky archaeologist Tom
- Dillehay discovered indisputable traces there of a human
- settlement that was inhabited between 12,800 and 12,300 years
- ago. Usually all scientists can find from that far back are
- stones and bones. In this case, thanks to a peat layer that
- formed during the late Pleistocene era, organic matter was
- mummified and preserved as well.
- </p>
- <p> In a decade of digging, Dillehay's team found an
- unparalleled array of artifacts, including not only stone tools
- and animal bones but also chunks of mastodon meat, wild
- potatoes, and seaweed and other plants that must have been
- imported from the Pacific coast, some 40 miles away. The
- archaeologists discovered fire pits surrounded by burned wood
- chips, wooden lances with hardened tips, wooden basins
- containing seeds, grindstones--and a human footprint. The
- foundation of a wishbone-shaped structure held the remains of
- more than 20 types of medicinal plants, some of which bore marks
- that may be the imprints of human molars. Most intriguing of
- all, the scientists unearthed wooden foundations and crude
- timbers that Dille hay believes supported an oval, tentlike
- dwelling similar to late Pleistocene shelters found on the
- Siberian plains. Says he: "We know these people exploited a wide
- variety of resources stretching from Monte Verde all the way to
- the coast. They used wood, ate plants, fashioned stone tools and
- from time to time captured game animals, such as mastodons and
- paleollamas."
- </p>
- <p> All the artifacts from Monte Verde have now been subjected
- to dozens of radiocarbon analyses--a standard archaeological
- dating technique in which the amount of radioactive carbon in an
- organic specimen is used to calculate its age. Dillehay says he
- is "very confident" that he has found remnants of a culture that
- existed some 125 centuries ago.
- </p>
- <p> Dillehay has also uncovered traces of what may be an even
- older campsite nearby on a buried promontory. The evidence: 26
- fractured stones, some of which were clearly worked by human
- hands, as well as three clay-lined pits containing charcoal that
- may be nearly 33,000 years old. Although radiocarbon dating
- supports this idea, Dillehay is reluctant to draw any
- conclusions. "The older level is a hell of a problem," he says,
- "and it simply will not go away. The more I look at the
- evidence, the more it looks like it represents human culture,
- but intellectually I still can't accept that humans were in the
- New World earlier than 15,000 to 20,000 years ago."
- </p>
- <p> Meadowcroft Rock Shelter, Pennsylvania
- </p>
- <p> Although the age of the earliest objects from Meadowcroft
- remains controversial, this rock shelter 30 miles southwest of
- Pittsburgh has long been considered one of North America's most
- promising pre-Clovis sites. Among the findings: charcoal, pieces
- of bone and antler (some scored with knife marks) and charred
- fragments of basketry that are estimated to be between 12,000
- and 15,000 years old. There is also an assortment of non-Clovis
- blades and points. Says Mercyhurst's Ado vasio, who has studied
- Meadowcroft for nearly 20 years: "It may well be the oldest
- archaeological site in North America."
- </p>
- <p> Bluefish Caves, Yukon Territory
- </p>
- <p> Discovered in 1975 by researchers with the Archaeological
- Survey of Canada, these caves in the remote northern Yukon have
- yielded flaked stone tools that are 10,000 to 13,000 years old,
- what appear to be butchered mammoth bones 15,500 to 20,000
- years old and bone tools from perhaps 23,500 years ago. To
- date, how ever, the researchers have been unable to find any
- hearths or other cultural features.
- </p>
- <p> Taima-Taima, Venezuela
- </p>
- <p> An ancient water hole called Taima-Taima in northern
- Venezuela became the deathbed of a young mastodon--killed,
- apparently, by some of the first Americans. The site, excavated
- by Alan Bryan and Ruth Gruhn of the University of Alberta in
- Edmonton, appeared to contain 13,000-year-old mastodon bones,
- one of them embedded with a pointed stone projectile. Mixed in
- were stone tools and rounded pebbles that could have been made
- only by humans. Some archaeologists, however, believe the
- artifacts found at Taima-Taima became interspersed with the
- mastodon bones as the water level in the hole rose and are
- therefore much younger than they seem. Even so, there is strong
- interest in the site because its reputed age is close to that
- of Monte Verde.
- </p>
- <p> Pedra Furada, Brazil
- </p>
- <p> Of all the plausible places for early human settlement of
- the Americas, Pedra Furada, located in a region of dramatic
- sandstone cliffs in the arid outback of northeastern Brazil, is
- probably the most exciting--and most disputed. When
- archaeologist Niede Guidon of the School for the Advanced Study
- of Social Sciences in Paris first excavated the site in 1978,
- she found cave paintings, ash-filled hearths and what she
- believes are stone tools that are at least 30,000 and perhaps
- more than 50,000 years old. Says Guidon: "I was the first person
- to be surprised. I believed the standard theories." Each
- successive radiocarbon test, though, bore out her initial
- findings. She became a convert--and an untiring champion--of the pre-Clovis theory.
- </p>
- <p> But convincing fellow scientists has been a battle.
- Guidon's conclusions have been greeted with skepticism by many
- archaeologists. One problem, explains Randall White of New York
- University, is that the "tools" from the deepest levels at Pedra
- Furada are mixed with naturally fractured river gravel. This
- suggests that the geological layer was not laid down in an
- orderly way. The stone flakes could easily have been churned
- together with much older river rock before settling. Moreover,
- they might not be human-made at all; the artifacts themselves
- could have formed by natural erosion.
- </p>
- <p> Critics have similar doubts about charcoal Guidon believes
- came from ancient fireplaces. "Radiocarbon dating is tried and
- true," explains archaeologist David Meltzer of Southern
- Methodist University. "The problem is linking the dating of
- objects to human occupation. How do you know it was a piece of
- charcoal touched by human hands and not just a piece of burned
- tree?" Brian Fagan of the University of California at Santa
- Barbara is a bit more blunt: "I think Pedra Furada is absolute
- horse manure."
- </p>
- <p> That kind of derision doesn't faze the feisty Guidon. On
- the charcoal deposits, she argues, "If they had been left by
- forest fires, carbon deposits would have been found scattered
- across a wide area." They are not. In many cases, the charcoal
- is ringed by stones, says Guidon, which is strong supporting
- evidence that these were man-made hearths, not natural
- formations. Besides, the area was a humid, tropical rain forest
- 30,000 years ago, and natural fires would have had a hard time
- getting started.
- </p>
- <p> The artifacts in deep layers don't trouble her either.
- They couldn't have been washed in from elsewhere and mixed, she
- says, because the rock shelter where they were found is more
- than 60 ft. above the surrounding terrain. Nor could the
- objects have tumbled down from higher up on the cliff, says
- Guidon, since the cave is protected by a massive rock overhang
- that would have kept out both falling rock and flowing water.
- </p>
- <p> Those who remain skeptical of pre-Clovis findings are most
- troubled by the ambiguous nature of many of the artifacts. To
- make a convincing case for a pre-Clovis culture, says Cornell
- archaeologist Thomas Lynch, "recognizable artifacts from that
- period must be dispersed over a broad area, reflecting the
- movement of primitive peoples from place to place. A Clovis
- point is just as recognizable as the tail fin on a 1952
- Cadillac."
- </p>
- <p> Like its more conventional counterpart, the pre-Clovis
- theory has some logistical problems. If humans got to South
- America by 13,000 years ago, they would have had to cross the
- Bering land bridge many thousands of years earlier. That would
- have been no problem, but heading south from there would have
- been tough: ice sheets--or the inhospitable terrain they left
- behind--cut off virtually all access to the bulk of North
- America from Alaska between 20,000 and 14,000 years ago.
- Guidon's rather controversial answer: maybe the immigrants came
- over to South America in boats directly from Asia.
- </p>
- <p> Despite all the doubts and unanswered questions, the case
- for pre-Clovis Americans is gaining ground. Even if the
- discoveries at Pedra Furada fail to satisfy the critics, sites
- such as Monte Verde and Meadowcroft are powerful testimony that
- early migrations did take place. However the first immigrants
- got to the New World, and whatever the reason why they left
- behind so little physical evidence, it has become difficult to
- deny their existence--and increasingly likely that earliest
- American history will have to be rewritten.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-