In
mid October 2011 the journal Science published a reexamination of a
mastodon bone originally excavated in the late 1970s at the Manis
site in north western Washington State. Embedded in the bone, one of
the mastodon’s 19 ribs, was the tip of a bone projectile. Using DNA
analysis, a team led by Texas A&M University archaeologist
Michael Waters determined that the point was itself fashioned from
mastodon bone. Radiocarbon dating of the rib and projectile indicate
they are 13,800 years old, predating the so-called “Clovis
horizon,” roughly 11,000 years ago, when the Clovis
culture,associated with fluted, stone points shaped like a Catholic
bishop’s hat, first emerged in the archaeological record. In the
1930sarchaeologists identified these Clovis toolmakers as the
original settlers of the Americas. These Paleo-Indian may have
crossed the now-submerged landmass in the Bering Strait from
northeastern Asia. The Manis mastodon is the latest in more than a
decade of findings prompting archaeologists to consider that there
might have been earlier migrations of settlers. “We’ve known
there’s pre-Clovis for a long time,” says Gary Haynes of the
University of Nevada,Reno. Adds James Adovasio, an archaeologist at
Mercyhurst College in Erie, Pennsylvania: “What you’re seeing is
the emergence of ideas that reflect the current ferment in the field
now that we know this old model doesn’t work.” Change is afoot,
but it’s not a unanimous shift, says David G. Anderson, an
archaeologist at the University of Tennessee. He notes that in a
survey administered by one of his graduate students to 200
Paleo-Indian researchers, 70percent acknowledged there had to be
pre-Clovis populations in the Americas. “The problem is,”
Anderson explains, “we know so little about pre-Clovis that we need
really well documented sites. ”Waters’ other work at the Debra L.
Friedkin site on Buttermilk Creek in central Texas, published in
March 2011, also in Science, fits Anderson’s bill. There, in
perfect stratigraphical alignment,archaeologists found the remains of
tools left behind by different Archaic period hunter-gatherers
sitting above those of various Paleo-Indian cultures. The team
believes the oldest layer, containing20,000 pieces made of chert, a
sedimentary rock with roughly 100discernable tools such as blades,
choppers, and end scrapers dates to15,500 years ago, 2,500 years
before Clovis technology. The assemblage found at Buttermilk Creek
does not resemble those at several previously found pre-Clovis sites,
such as the 14,500 year old tools from Monte Verde in southern Chile.
Its incorporation of bifacial and blade let technology does recall
Clovis culture,suggesting a lineage between the two. “There’s a
logical expectation that somewhere in North America we are going to
find something that can be called proto Clovis,” says Stuart
Fiedel, an archaeologist at the Louis Berger Group in Richmond,
Virginia. The report on Buttermilk Creek, as with other potential
pre-Clovis discoveries, sparked fierce debate among Paleo-Indian
researchers about the accuracy of the findings. Fiedel notes the
assemblage could be characterized as a fluted point away from being a
Clovis toolkit.“It has similarities to Clovis,” says Waters. “But
it’s not Clovis in the strict definition.” Critics slammed Waters
on his dating method, optically stimulated luminescence, which
essentially measures when crystals in surrounding sediment, such as
quartz, were last exposed to sunlight, as opposed to measuring the
artifacts themselves. It’s as accurate as radiocarbon dating,but
less precise, with greater margin for error. Waters also fielded
criticism of the Manis mastodon analysis, with detractors pointing
out that the DNA analysis couldn’t confirm the bone projectile came
from a different animal, meaning a bone fragment from the same beast
may have pierced its own rib. Waters notes that butcher marks on
themastodon bones refute that interpretation. Adovasio explains that
American archaeologists are behind their South American and European
colleagues in accepting people prior to Clovis being in the
Americas.He even points to Science which he calls “the last bastion
of conservatism in this arena” publishing Waters’ reports as an
indication of the tide turning. “Science,” he says,“is about
changing your mind when confronted with alternative data that seems
plausible,” he says.
Source: Archaeology Magazine, Edition Jan'12*)
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