Ancient Oregon caves may
upend understanding of humans in the Americas
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[October 04, 2014]
By Courtney Sherwood
PORTLAND Ore. (Reuters) - A
network of caves in rural Oregon may be the oldest site
of human habitation in the Americas, suggesting an
ancient human population reached what is now the United
States at the end of the last Ice Age, Oregon officials
said on Friday.
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That realization prompted the U.S. National Park service to
add the Paisley Five Mile Point Caves to its list of nationally
important archaeological and historical sites, the Oregon Parks
and Recreation Department said in a statement.
Only recently have researchers become convinced that humans
lived at the Paisley caves a thousand years before the human
settlement documented in the so-called "Clovis" sites in New
Mexico, Dennis Jenkins, director of the University of Oregon
Archaeology Field School, said in the statement.
The "Clovis First" hypothesis holds that distinctive
projectile-point artifacts found at multiple sites across the
United States are signs of the first human settlements in North
America, the statement said.
But Jenkins' team used radiocarbon dating to determine that more
than 200 samples of human feces collected from the Paisley caves
were deposited in the area 14,300 years ago, nearly 1,000 years
before the human settlement evidenced in the Clovis era.
Jenkins said the test findings provide "significant new
information regarding the timing and spread of the first
settlers in the Americas," suggesting an ancient human
population reached what is now the United States at the end of
the last Ice Age.
In addition to biological samples, Jenkins' team also found
stones used to grind plant materials, woven plant fibers,
modified animal bones and stemmed projectile points.
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"The people living there 14,300 years ago were gathering and
consuming aromatic roots, for which they would have needed special
knowledge that would have developed over time," according to the
press release announcing the site's placement on the National
Register of Historic Places.
Today, the Paisley caves are surrounded by sagebrush in a sparsely
populated area of south-central Oregon. But researchers believe the
site was once a grassy plain containing a lake and populated by
camel, bison and waterfowl.
Archaeologists first excavated the Paisley caves in 1938. The
University of Oregon's current research effort at the site began in
2002.
(Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Sandra Maler)
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