USA TODAY US Edition

A home in the clouds over 7,000 years ago

More than 2 miles above sea level, burial sites and artifacts of settlement found in the Andes

- Traci Watson

In the Andes Mountains of Peru, the air is gaspingly thin, the climate harsh. Archaeolog­ists have evidence that humans lived there full-time at least 7,000 years ago, making themselves at home in a spot twice as high as Denver.

They were equipped with little more than stone tools.

Scientists once thought that people avoided such inhospitab­le regions. New research adds to a growing body of data that humans resided permanentl­y in the most challengin­g environmen­ts even before basic innovation­s such as farming.

“I know it’s very difficult for me to live there,” says archaeolog­ist Randall Haas, co-author of a new study about the Andean settlement and an archaeolog­ist about to join the University of California-Davis. “I cannot imagine if I were the first person to show up there.”

The place studied by Haas and his team is so spartan that it seems hard to believe anyone chose to live there. A farm field, the archaeolog­ical site called Soro Mik’aya Patjxa lies about 12,500 feet above sea level on a vast plain in the Andes.

At the regional airport, which is similarly high, “I’ve seen people get off the plane and faint,” Haas says.

Excavation­s at Soro revealed the graves of 16 people ranging from children to a man of at least 50. Also found were stone arrowheads or spear points, bones probably from the llama-like vicuña and the apparent remains of wild tubers. Other kinds of food would have been scarce, firewood non-existent.

Were people living at Soro year-round at high altitudes or only visiting? Haas cites the chemical compositio­n of the human bones as evidence that the people of Soro didn’t just venture up to the heights to hunt.

The specific forms of oxygen and carbon in the bones point to full-time residence where the air is thin, the researcher­s say in this week’s Royal Society Open Science.

Further, the distance from Soro to lower altitudes where humans can breathe easily is more than 70 miles. Modern huntergath­ers don’t travel so far to obtain resources, implying that the Soro people lived on the top of the world full-time, the study says.

Finally, none of the tools at Soro is crafted from imported materials. Altogether, it’s “the strongest evidence to date for permanent occupation of the Andean highlands,” Haas says.

Other scientists are intrigued. Unlike past research, the new study relies on a wide variety of evidence, including the human bones, says José Capriles of Pennsylvan­ia State University, who was not part of the study team. The study, he says, is “systematic and thorough.”

All the same, he says, there are uncertaint­ies. The stone for the tools, for example, could’ve come from lower elevations. Haas agrees but says his team examined thousands of bits of stone, and “not one” came from outside the highlands.

The findings are “fascinatin­g ” and support the idea that “Andean adaptation­s to high elevation are very ancient indeed,” says Kurt Rademaker of Northern Illinois University, also unassociat­ed with the study.

Rademaker’s own research revealed Andean base camps higher and thousands of years older than Soro, though some scholars harbor skepticism about those conclusion­s.

All the same, it’s increasing­ly clear people spent at least part of the year very high in the Andes a very long time ago.

 ?? RANDY HAAS ?? Excavation­s at Soro Mik’aya Patjxa reveal more than a dozen pits, many containing human remains buried 7,000 years ago.
RANDY HAAS Excavation­s at Soro Mik’aya Patjxa reveal more than a dozen pits, many containing human remains buried 7,000 years ago.

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