Idaho artifacts show human presence in Americas 16,600 years ago
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[August 31, 2019]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Artifacts including
stone tools and animal bone fragments found in Idaho dating back about
16,600 years represent what may be the oldest evidence of humans in the
Americas and offer insight into the routes people took as they spread
into the New World.
Scientists on Thursday said they used a technique called radiocarbon
dating to determine the age of artifacts unearthed at an archeological
site called Cooper's Ferry along the Salmon River in western Idaho near
the town of Cottonwood.
People were present there at a time when large expanses of North America
were covered by massive ice sheets, and big mammals such as mammoths,
mastodons, saber-toothed cats, the giant short-faced bear, horses, bison
and camels roamed the continent's Ice Age landscape.
"The Cooper's Ferry site contains the earliest radiocarbon-dated
archaeological evidence in the Americas," said Oregon State University
anthropology professor Loren Davis, who led the study published in the
journal Science.
Based on this evidence, people first lived at the site, which was
situated south of the continental ice sheets present at the time,
between about 16,600 and 15,300 years ago and returned to live there
multiple times until about 13,300 years ago, Davis added.
The oldest artifacts included four sharp stone flake tools used for
cutting and scraping and 43 flakes of stone left over from making stone
tools, as well as animal bone fragments and horse tooth fragments. Also
found at the site were charcoal, fire-cracked rock, a hearth and
food-processing evidence.
Our species first appeared in Africa roughly 300,000 years ago and later
trekked worldwide. There has been a scientific debate about when humans
first entered the Americas, crossing the former land bridge that
connected Siberia to Alaska.
The new findings bolster the hypothesis that people in the initial
migration into the Americas followed a route down the Pacific coast
rather than a route through an inland ice-free corridor as some
scientists have argued.
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Excavation work by scientists at the Cooper's Ferry archaeological
site located along the Salmon River in western Idaho is shown in
this image released August 29, 2019. Loren Davis/Oregon State
University/Handout via REUTERS
"Cooper's Ferry is located in the upper Columbia River basin. The
Columbia River would provide the first Americans their first route
to interior lands south of the continental ice sheets," Davis said.
With headwaters in British Columbia, it is the biggest river flowing
into the Pacific Ocean from North America, opening into the ocean
near Astoria, Oregon.
"The people who occupied the Cooper's Ferry site pursued a hunting
and gathering lifeway most likely as small groups of people, likely
fewer than 25 people in a group, who made multiple movements each
year to access key resources as they were available," Davis said.
Certain stone projectile points, which would have been attached to
the ends of spears or dart shafts, closely resembled examples found
in northern Japan dating a bit earlier than at the Cooper's Ferry
site, the researchers said.
"We hypothesize that this may signal a cultural connection between
early peoples who lived around the northern Pacific Rim, and that
traditional technological ideas spread from northeastern Asia into
North America at the end of the last glacial period," Davis said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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