Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Findings might alter timeline for spread of humans

People possibly lived in area 1,500 years earlier than thought

- By DEBORAH NETBURN

Thirty feet beneath the murky waters of the Aucilla River, about 40 miles southeast of Tallahasse­e, Florida, archaeolog­ists have found evidence of some of the earliest known humans in the Americas.

In submerged sediments that date back 14,550 years, a team of scuba-diving researcher­s has uncovered six stone artifacts — including knives and flaked pieces of rock — at the underwater site known as Page-Ladson. They also pulled up a mastodon tusk with cut marks on it that experts say were made when these ancient people butchered its carcass alongside a lake bed.

The findings, published Friday in Science Advances, provide the first sign that communitie­s of hunter-gatherers were living in the southeast United States 1,500 years earlier than many scientists previously believed, suggesting a new story line for when and how people first came to the Americas.

“We are getting enough data now, particular­ly on the East Coast, to know that people have been around here for a very long time,” said Dennis Stanford, an anthropolo­gist at the Smithsonia­n National Museum of Natural History who was not involved in the work.

From the 1930s through the early 2000s, the dominant narrative among archaeolog­ists held that the first Americans were members of the Clovis culture. These pioneers left their distinctiv­e spearheads scattered across a region that now covers the United States, Mexico and northern South America, almost like archaeolog­ical bread crumbs.

Most researcher­s believed members of this group were the descendant­s of big-game hunters who followed their prey across the Bering land bridge from Siberia into Alaska around 13,000 or 14,000 years ago. From there, they migrated down into Canada and very quickly spread across the enormous land mass to the south.

“If you disagreed with that, you were relegated to being on the periphery of the science community,” said Dennis Jenkins, senior research archaeolog­ist at the Museum of Natural and Cultural History at the University of Oregon, who was not involved in the Florida discovery. “You were seen as a lunatic or way out there on the fringe.”

But over the past few decades, persuasive challenges to the Clovis-First narrative have begun to emerge.

In 1997, researcher­s confirmed that an archaeolog­ical site in Chile held evidence of human activity dating back to 14,500 years ago — a full millennium before the Clovis-First theory would allow. In 2002, Jenkins led an excavation that unearthed 14,300-year-old fossilized human feces in Oregon’s Paisley caves. A handful of other pre-Clovis sites popped up too, including one in Wisconsin and another in Texas.

The 14,500-year-old butchered mastodon at Page-Ladson is now among the two or three oldest archaeolog­ical sites in the New World and the oldest in the American Southeast.

“It’s important because it adds another site to the very small list of well-dated pre-Clovis sites,” Jenkins said. “We don’t find much evidence of these people because there weren’t very many of them. We’re looking for a very, very few people in a huge, huge haystack.”

The finding also adds a new wrinkle to another commonly held theory, that human hunters caused the rapid extinction of late Ice Age mammals like mastodons, mammoths and giant ground sloths. All of these megafauna disappeare­d around 12,500 years ago.

“However humans and mastodons interacted, it took at least 2,000 years for the process of extinction to run to completion,” said Daniel Fisher, a paleontolo­gist at the University of Michigan who worked on the study.

Fisher was responsibl­e for interpreti­ng the suite of cut marks on the nearly 7-foot-long mastodon tusk, which was found buried in sediment in one whole piece. His conclusion is that the cuts were made as these ancient people tried to rip the tusk from its base, perhaps to gain access to edible tissue inside.

“A tusk this size would have held over 15 pounds of tender, nutritious tissue in its pulp cavity and that certainly would have been of great value,” he said.

The excavation­s at Page-Ladson are not new. In the 1980s and ’90s, another research team led by archaeolog­ist James Dunbar and paleontolo­gist David Webb spent several seasons at the site. Using radiocarbo­n dating, they determined that the site was more than 14,000 years old. But their findings, published in a book in 2006, were disregarde­d by the archaeolog­y community at large.

“It was just impossible for them to accept at that time that there was anything older than Clovis,” said Jessi Halligan, a geoarchaeo­logist at Florida State University who co-led the new work. “People said, ‘Oh, it’s an underwater site? We can’t assess that. It’s impossible to validate.’”

The field work was challengin­g. The Aucilla River is cold, and the water is so dark and murky that divers can’t see without using lights mounted on their caver helmets.

They used trowels to dig — 5 to 10 centimeter­s at a time — and marked the site off with string, just like they would on land.

But working underwater also has some benefits. “It’s almost a zero-gravity environmen­t, so you can dig upside down and sideways — whatever is the most convenient way to get in there,” Halligan said.

Over three years, the team uncovered six artifacts in a layer of sand, fine gravel and mastodon dung as much as 15 feet below the riverbed. The artifacts were deposited next to what was once the western edge of a pond at the bottom of a sinkhole.

The radiocarbo­n dates came from bits of dung deposited in the sediment layers where the artifacts were found. The researcher­s also dated the sediments above and below the strata containing the pre-Clovis artifacts, just to be sure the layers hadn’t mixed over time.

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY DANIEL C. FISHER, UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN MUSEUM OF PALEONTOLO­GY ?? Mastodon tusk pieces recovered in northweste­rn Florida are held in place by Jessi Halligan of Florida State University, left, with help from Jason Bourque and Cynthia Darling-Fisher. The tusk had cut marks indicating the animal’s carcass was butchered.
PHOTO COURTESY DANIEL C. FISHER, UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN MUSEUM OF PALEONTOLO­GY Mastodon tusk pieces recovered in northweste­rn Florida are held in place by Jessi Halligan of Florida State University, left, with help from Jason Bourque and Cynthia Darling-Fisher. The tusk had cut marks indicating the animal’s carcass was butchered.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States