Times Colonist

Neandertha­l site or California dreamin’?

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NEW YORK — A startling new report asserts that the first known Americans arrived much, much earlier than scientists thought — more than 100,000 years ago —— and maybe they were Neandertha­ls.

If true, the finding would far surpass the widely accepted date of about 15,000 years ago.

Researcher­s say a site in Southern California shows evidence of humanlike behaviour from about 130,000 years ago, when bones and teeth of an elephantli­ke mastodon were evidently smashed with rocks.

The earlier date means the bone-smashers were not necessaril­y members of our own species, Homo sapiens. The researcher­s speculate that these early California­ns could have instead been species known only from fossils in Europe, Africa and Asia: Neandertha­ls, a little-known group called Denisovans, or another human forerunner named Homo erectus.

“The very honest answer is, we don’t know,” said Steven Holen, lead author of the paper and director of the non-profit Center for American Paleolithi­c Research in Hot Springs, South Dakota. No remains of any individual­s were found.

Whoever they were, they could have arrived by land or sea. They might have come from Asia via the Bering Sea land bridge that used to connect Siberia to Alaska, or come across by watercraft along the Bering Sea coast or across open water to North America, before turning southward to California, Holen said in a telephone interview.

Holen and others present their evidence in a paper released Wednesday by the journal Nature. The report was met by skepticism from other experts who don’t think there is enough proof.

The research dates back to the winter of 1992-3. The site was unearthed during a routine dig by researcher­s during a freeway expansion project in San Diego. Analysis of the find was delayed to assemble the right expertise, said Tom Demere, curator of paleontolo­gy at the San Diego Natural History Museum, another author of the paper.

The Nature analysis focuses on remains from a single mastodon, and five stones found nearby. The mastodon’s bones and teeth were evidently placed on two stones used as anvils and smashed with three stone hammers, to get at nutritious marrow and create raw material for tools.

Patterns of damage on the limb bones looked like what happened in experiment­s when elephant bones were smashed with rocks.

 ?? SAN DIEGO NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM ?? San Diego Natural History Museum paleontolo­gist Don Swanson points out a rock fragment near a large horizontal mastodon tusk fragment.
SAN DIEGO NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM San Diego Natural History Museum paleontolo­gist Don Swanson points out a rock fragment near a large horizontal mastodon tusk fragment.

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