Posted on 11/05/2009 2:29:13 PM PST by SunkenCiv
The bed of artefacts in the state of Sonora in northwest Mexico also includes the bones of an extinct cousin of the mastodon called a gomphothere. The beast was probably hunted and killed by the Clovis people, known for their distinctive spear points, who mysteriously disappeared within about 500 years of leaving their first archeological traces.
Intact Clovis camp sites and extensive evidence of hunting has been found across the United States, with the highest concentration of sites just north of the Mexican border, in the San Pedro River basin of southeastern Arizona. But relatively little is known about their activities in what is now Mexico, despite about 25 discoveries of Clovis tools and other artefacts being made in the region during the past decade.
A team led by Vance Holliday of the University of Arizona in Tucson, in collaboration with Guadalupe Sanchez-Miranda of the National Institute of Anthropology and History in Mexico City, uncovered the new Clovis site at El Fin Del Mundo -- which translates to 'the end of the Earth' -- roughly 100 kilometres northwest of Hermosillo, on isolated ranch land.
Team member Susan Mentzer of the University of Arizona presented the findings at the annual meeting of the Geological Society of America this week in Portland, Oregon. Radiocarbon dating and other analyses of buried artefacts and bones suggested that they were left there nearly 13,000 years ago, and that the site was once close to a stream.
The gomphothere was a juvenile, Mentzer said, and was a kind that had two rather than four tusks. Chips of rock were discovered in the bone bed, and the site included a variety of tools, including scrapers and blades. More dating and analysis is under way on specimens from the location.
(Excerpt) Read more at nature.com ...
Gomphotherium installation at Galleta Meadows.
http://www.galletameadows.com/gallery/displayimage.php?album=2&pos=27
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There have been more Clovis Points found east of the Mississippi that west of it. The name Clovis comes from the area where these points were first identified, Clovis, New Mexico.
that’s the rationale for “the Solutrean Solution” — but of course, to bridge the gap in time will require longterm and extensive offshore archaeology. Based on the dated finds known so far, the Clovis culture from beginning to end didn’t last an awfully long time.
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