Redefining the Clovis People: Texas Dig Offers Clues

by PEP | July 6, 2008 at 04:38 am
961 views | 7 Recommendations | 5 comments

In Texas, they're digging up some interesting stuff that may re-define the Clovis people. Now if the experts could only figure out that the Siberian land bridge went both ways.

Since the 1930s textbooks have taught that the New World's first inhabitants, known for the town in New Mexico where their spear points were discovered, walked from Siberia to Alaska about 13,300 years ago. The Clovis people were believed to be highly mobile nomadic hunters, never settling in one place, instead surviving on massive mammoths, mastodons and ancient bison.

But in excavations starting in 1998 Gault has revealed that Clovis people lived at the site for extended periods over a span of 300 years, says Michael Collins, a research associate with the Texas Archeological Research Laboratory. The evidence? Scientists have found numerous tools manufactured from local stone, used until they were worn, then repaired repeatedly until they finally were discarded. In other words, Paleo-Indians were members of a settled community. "We're redefining Clovis," Collins says.

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Caoimhin1
Caoimhin1
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 07:54 on July 6th, 2008

PEP, I like this story. It's good stuff.

0
PEP

Don't you just wonder when "scholars" make pronouncements--often overlooking the oral traditions of the people they're talking about--and then, later on, they're proven wrong? I wrote a poem about archaeology that idnd't amuse too many archaeo's. Oh, well.       ;}   Thanks for the read and the flag!

dunkelberg
dunkelberg
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 16:12 on July 6th, 2008

This goes along with the "poop record" reported earlier this year.  Fossilized human feces was discovered in Oregon.

National Geographic News reports online:

After repeated radiocarbon dating and DNA analyses, the scientists concluded that the oldest of the human-produced material was deposited at least a thousand years before the so-called Clovis culture, according to a paper appearing in this week's issue [editor's note: this was posted 3 April 2008] of the journal Science.

Also,

0
PEP

Thanks for the read, comments and flag. I find all this fascinating.

0
rabecca.

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