When Did Humans Come to the Americas?
Recent scientific findings date their arrival earlier than ever thought, sparking hot debate among archaeologists
- By Guy Gugliotta
- Illustration by Andy Martin
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2013, Subscribe
For much of its length, the slow-moving Aucilla River in northern Florida flows underground, tunneling through bedrock limestone. But here and there it surfaces, and preserved in those inky ponds lie secrets of the first Americans.
For years adventurous divers had hunted fossils and artifacts in the sinkholes of the Aucilla about an hour east of Tallahassee. They found stone arrowheads and the bones of extinct mammals such as mammoth, mastodon and the American ice age horse.
Then, in the 1980s, archaeologists from the Florida Museum of Natural History opened a formal excavation in one particular sink. Below a layer of undisturbed sediment they found nine stone flakes that a person must have chipped from a larger stone, most likely to make tools and projectile points. They also found a mastodon tusk, scarred by circular cut marks from a knife. The tusk was 14,500 years old.
The age was surprising, even shocking, for it suddenly made the Aucilla sinkhole one of the earliest places in the Americas to betray the presence of human beings. Curiously, though, scholars largely ignored the discoveries of the Aucilla River Prehistory Project, instead clinging to the conviction that America’s earliest settlers arrived more recently, some 13,500 years ago. But now the sinkhole is getting a fresh look, along with several other provocative archaeological sites that show evidence of an earlier human presence in the Americas, perhaps much earlier.
Which is why I found myself on the banks of the Aucilla with Michael Waters, director of the Center for the Study of the First Americans at Texas A&M University. A tall, unassuming 57-year-old, with an easy confidence honed during more than 30 years in the field, he had organized archaeologists and divers to gather more evidence of the sinkhole’s role in prehistory. “This site is as old as anything in North America,” Waters said. “The context is fine, and the dating is fine, but people just looked at it and said, ‘Hmm, that’s interesting,’ and that was it. It had a lot of potential, but it was in limbo. We’re here to confirm the earlier work, and if we’re lucky, we’ll find some more artifacts.”
Waters’s team, led by Texas A&M underwater archaeologist Jessi Halligan, worked at the Page-Ladson sink, named for Buddy Page, who discovered it, and John Ladson, the property’s owner. The sink lies 30 feet below the opaque surface of the Aucilla, which, following heavy rains, was dyed nearly black by humus from the hardwood hammock. Fish were jumping in the water, while birds, turtles and the occasional gator patrolled nearby. Were it not for Halligan’s divers, there would be no human presence and the silence would be absolute.
Underwater archaeological sites are staked out and marked in meter-square quadrants, just like open-air excavations. The mud, troweled away by one diver, was fed into the mouth of a four-inch suction dredge held by a second diver. The dredge discharged into a pair of mesh screens mounted on a skiff moored in midstream. Big pieces—stones, bones, leaves and perhaps human artifacts—collected on the top screen, a quarter-inch mesh, and the small stuff was caught by the sixteenth-inch mesh below.
First the researchers had to clear the site of the detritus that had accumulated in the 15 years since the first excavation ended. Then, to reach the most promising level, divers removed a ten-foot layer of clay that overlay it. The work was tedious—“like diving in dark roast coffee,” said James Dunbar, an archaeologist and member of the original Aucilla team who’d returned for a second look—but the blanket of sediment guaranteed the site’s integrity. Everything below the sediment was as old as the people who left it there. In the oxygen-deprived deposits within the Aucilla mud, nothing decays.
Working in the Stygian gloom with lamps and suction pumps, the divers unearthed a number of small bone fragments, the fist-size vertebra of a large mammal and a manhole cover-size shoulder blade that might have belonged to the same mastodon whose tusk bore the cut marks of the ancient hunters. Also recovered in the fine-mesh screen were many pounds of mastodon digesta, the remains of vegetation that the six-ton beast ground to a mulch-like texture and swallowed.
The observations the researchers made in their days at the sinkhole validated the original excavation. (And on a subsequent expedition they found more mastodon bones.) Each new discovery generated fresh enthusiasm. “All we need now,” said Halligan, “are more human artifacts.”
***
About 100,000 years ago, modern human beings started spreading out from their initial homeland in Africa to occupy Europe, Asia and, by sea, even Australia, displacing or absorbing Neanderthals and other archaic hominid species. That diaspora took about 70,000 years, and when it was completed our ancestors stood triumphant.
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Comments (23)
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Thank you for a really good piece. Note to copy editor: on p. 44, middle of 3rd column, "one of a kind" should not be hyphenated. America desperately needs a hyphen clinic.
Posted by Eric Martinson on April 23,2013 | 09:00 PM
I'm Ojibwe from Ontario Canada and our DNA was sampled, and it does give some credence to the Solutreans arrival during the last ice age. One important factor that is not mentioned in this article is that the First Americans were the people who had African and Asian DNA from the Haplogroups A,B,C,D who were here long before the ice age even happened. Even before all these carbon dates and genealogy tests were taken, the Ojibwe have had an Ancient Oral History that states our migrations. Just recently with all these carbon dating and genealogy tests the findings lined up perfectly with the Ojibwe Oral History, which I found to be Amazing! Another important factor that was not mentioned in this article is the Topper Site along the Savannah River in Allendale County, South Carolina. This site proves there was people in North America over 50,000 years ago, long before the Solutreans made it to North America. When the Solutreans made it across the Atlantic 13,500 years ago, it was Ojibwe who met them in what is now Newfoundland and Labrador on the east coast of Canada. As Ojibwe being friendly people by nature, welcomed the Solutreans and they became apart of the Ojibwe Nation. The Ojibwe Nation are the only tribe in North America with a mixture of the Haplogroup A,B,C,D genetic markers, and the mysterious X gene, of which was later identified as the Solutrean DNA. After 13,500 years of human copulation between then and today, the Solutrean gene x was watered down over time, and you would never know the Ojibwe even had it without today's technology. This explains why the Ojibwe Nation are the only Aborignals in North America with facial hair. Not all Ojibwe carry the Solutrean x gene, only some Ojibwe have it.
Posted by First Nations Canada on February 25,2013 | 05:58 AM
Page three remarks: "The new AMS tests confirmed that age estimate date, and DNA analysis showed that the projectile point was mastodon bone." Surely, the author meant to write: "The new AMS tests confirmed that age estimate date, and DNA analysis showed that the projectile point was IN mastodon bone." This is a provocative and well-presented article. It's time that a larger perspective were developed, concerning the populating of North and South America. It is not scientific to cling to old ideas, in the face of new and sound information. JDA.
Posted by Jamey D. Allen on February 21,2013 | 01:44 AM
Very good article. Thank you to those that contributed. As a layperson with a longtime interest in paleoanthropology and a lot of reading under my belt, I can only say that I have never doubted the existence of pre-Clovis populations in the Americas. When and whence they came is now the question. The article says the coprolites from the Paisley Cave were successfully used to extract and test mtDNA and showed Asian ancestry. I would interested to know if they tested for percentage of Neanderthalensis and Denisovan ancestry. Paleo-American DNA could be tested against these markers to theorize from where in Asia (presuming an Asian genome) the individual's ancestors may have ultimately come.
Posted by ebagby on February 18,2013 | 09:36 AM
I find it hard to imagine that the whole of the North and South American continents were populated by early humans crossing the Bering Strait. The early inhabitants supposedly trekked from Siberia down to Florida and then some of them continued hiking all the way down to Chile? To counter this, other suggestions are that people sailed to the Americas from Australia or Hawaii or some other place that they were willing to risk their lives for to get away from and end up who knows where. I wonder if it might benefit us to begin looking at America as a place that may have been evolving along with Europe rather than a place that was none existant before the Europeans bumped into it.
Posted by Mark Murphy on February 15,2013 | 05:57 PM
There are so many misconceptions about what it means to be a First Caucasoid, a Native American who is descended from ancient AMERICAN Caucasoid lineages (mtDNA X cluster). There are only scanty similarities to be compared between our genetic lineages and ~similar (none of which are entirely identical) subclades originating in the Old World, because we are NOT Indo-European at all. Our closest European relative are probably some members of the Basques and/or Finns. And I for one do not use my NA Caucasoid DNA as evidence that Europeans had / have any entitlement to our native homeland. We didn't go to Europe and take your land or exterminate YOU and your ancestors. It is ONLY people of European origin who attempt to make that ridiculous leap of logic, in order to JUSTIFY what they have done and continue to get away with. The tragedy of ancient NA Caucasoid people is that they / we have endured unrelenting ~genocide by BOTH Asian and European invaders to our land. That is why we are so frikn rare as to be near extinction, and our existence is never fairly ~acknowledged. Being nearly (but not precisely) identical in certain genetic racial features of our genomes, even of our phenomes, did not protect us from falling under attack by the Europeans. Please do not ignore us as if we died a long time ago. Some few of us are still right here, in America as we always were.
Posted by Debra Denman on February 15,2013 | 05:29 PM
Quote - "I don't know how you could write an article like this without mentioning the Topper Site on the Savannah River in South Carolina. There have been artifacts recovered there dating to 16,000 years BP. In addition there are artifacts that have been recovered 4 meters deeper in the ground and associated with charcoal that has been Carbon14 dated to 50,000 years BP. Posted by Mac on February 7,2013 | 06:56 PM" I'm rather surprised that there is no mention of the digs that took place at Serra Da Capivara, Brazil... Artifacts dating to circa 40,000 BC, which included quartzite being used to produce stone tools found inside a rock shelter, as well as other evidence of occupation dating to circa 50,000 BC which included animal bones and charcoal, again found inside the same rock shelter but at a much lower level in the excavation discovered by French and Brazilian archaeologists (Anne Marie Pessis)... All this and more can be seen in this BBC documentary which was first aired on the 1st September 1999... [url]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r6IrMjfbh6E[/url]
Posted by VIRACOCHA 666 on February 11,2013 | 07:03 PM
Too often when I read articles like this the only thing I am reminded of is the saying "repeat something enough and it becomes true". Archeology is based on CIRCUMSTANTIAL evidence. We can assume, suppose, theorize, derive, hypothesize etc.... Did ALL humans come from Africa? I doubt it. Did All Dinosaurs come from Siberia? Doubt that too. Much like two people on opposite sides of the earth having the same idea around the same time, nature too seems to work along these lines. That's just My opinion; if I get another 100 people to agree with me does it make it a fact? Continents shift, lands are flooded, sands bury evidence over time. When we study something, that is all we do. Study it. We didn't create it, and weren't around for its creation, so all we can do is create a theory and perhaps gain a partial understanding. I think on the whole, the human ego Needs to put things in nice neat little boxes to comfort itself, because the fact is we live in a Universe that is ever expanding and with that expansion there is more to learn. Always. My point being that there is a Super Consciousness out there that guides migration, guides animals, as well as humans, and when humans claim to know what happened thousands or millions of years ago is extremely egocentric, laughable, and naive.
Posted by El Rito on February 11,2013 | 06:55 PM
All of you talking up the Europeans first theory, It is doubtful that any of you can trace your ancestry to these people who came across. Furthermore, if we are going to bring up history from that long ago, the Indo-European peoples who inhabit most of Europe killed or forcibly assimilated the previous inhabitants of Europe about 7,000 years ago, including any surviving peoples related to the Europeans who may have reached America in the ice ages. None of the peoples of Europe, except maybe the Basques, are living where they were in the Solutrean times. So it is nearly impossible for any modern European ethnicity or nation to claim they had a right to conquer the Americas based on that. The Native Americans had been living in the Western Hemisphere for at least 12,000 years by 1492, long enough to have the most valid claim to the continents.
Posted by robert on February 11,2013 | 04:37 PM
I, too, was surprised that the Savannah River / Goodrich evidence was not mentioned, but I'm very glad to have this article update the debate on Clovis theory vs. other evidence. Another similar--perhaps even somehow related?--story would be the growing acceptance of large populations living in the Amazon basin. That seems related in that for many years anthro-archaeological dogma held that such could not be the case, but 'terra preta' and fields of pottery shards are evidence to the contrary. But now, to allow for or advocate alternatives to established theories such as either the Clovis or the lack of Amazon basin civilizations is fraught with Global Warming deniers readiness to seize on any such debunking as evidence in support of their views. It's complicated.
Posted by Schneb on February 10,2013 | 08:00 PM
If it is established that the Americas were first settled by Europeans, and there are now no decendants of those first people, it must follow that they were assimilated, or more likely exterminated, by the peoples who migrated from Asia. If that is true, then the re-colonization of the Americas by Europeans was a just attempt to regain the territory which was originally theirs. Please put me down for a side of beef when the sacred cows are slaughtered.
Posted by Franklin Williams on February 9,2013 | 04:07 PM
The king is dead, long live the king. I'm a retired archaeologist, and enjoy these articles. Vance Haynes held archaeologists who tried to study pre-Clovis sites in a state of professional fear. Professional people with good qualifications were loathe to speak out. I thought when Vance Haynes was out of the picture, things would improve, and they have! Kudos to all of you. Seems the newer Haynes doesn't have the clout that Vance had.
Posted by Rita Kenion on February 8,2013 | 03:13 PM
Establishing the specific date of human habitation is always difficult because of the factors that must be considered. Usually humans were highly mobile and did not yet develop communities with large numbers of remnant hard parts. Did all humans in North America come from Siberia? Probably not all, but most. Some probably also came from Oceania and other parts of Asia. Perhaps some came in from Europe by boat. Most likely a polyglot of races and cultures by the time of European discovery(?). As for the dating, there are buffalo pens in Southern Illinois bluffs that have been dated back to about 8,000 years ago. The real limit to human habitation in America was most likely ferocious and gigantic animals, i.e. short faced bears, tigers, etc.
Posted by Stuart Neiman on February 7,2013 | 12:43 AM
I don't know how you could write an article like this without mentioning the Topper Site on the Savannah River in South Carolina. There have been artifacts recovered there dating to 16,000 years BP. In addition there are artifacts that have been recovered 4 meters deeper in the ground and associated with charcoal that has been Carbon14 dated to 50,000 years BP.
Posted by Mac on February 7,2013 | 06:56 PM
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