Posted on 10/17/2011 1:55:09 PM PDT by Renfield
Mapmakers once thought the earth was flat. Astronomers used to believe the sun circled the earth. As late as the 1990s, archaeologists were convinced that the original American settlers crossed a land bridge from Asia into Alaska, found daylight between the glaciers, and gradually followed it south. According to what had been orthodox thinking, that happened about 12,000 years ago.
Suppose it were true, says Jack Rossen, associate professor and chair of the Department of anthropology. Suppose you could find a corridor through a mile-high wall of ice and follow it for a thousand miles. What would you eat? Popsicles?
There are seaweed belts along the western coast of the Americas, from Alaska to Chile, and theyre as ecologically complex as rain forests, he says. There are canopy species of animals, species of animals beneath the canopy, including fish, and theres the seaweed itself, which is incredibly rich in nutrients. What would people rather do? Try to find a meal in a world of ice, or take a boat down the coast and help themselves to fish, oysters, and greens?
In retrospect, the seaweed trail makes sense. But as recently as 15 years ago, it was archaeological heresy to think that North and South Americas first humans didnt use the land route. The evidence for that conventional wisdom came from a site excavated in the 1930s near what is now Clovis, New Mexico. According to carbon dating, the stone spear points discovered there were 11,200 years old, making Clovis the oldest known settlement in the Americas. The assumption was that hunter-gatherers from Asia had hiked south from the Bering land bridge, living off the occasional mastodon and whatever else they could find.
But in 1975 a visiting veterinary student came across what he thought was a cow bone exposed along a creek bed in southern Chile, some 50 miles from the Pacific coast. When the bone turned out to be a mastodon tusk, Tom Dillehay, a renowned archaeologist then at the University of Kentucky (now at Vanderbilt University), and his Chilean colleagues realized they had a prehistoric site on their hands. In 1976 the Dillehay team began an excavation project in Monte Verde, Chile, that would occupy them for the next nine years. In 1983 Dillehay asked one of his dissertation advisees Jack Rossen to join the dig.
He wanted me along because I knew how plant use among ancient cultures both as food and medicine reveals how those communities are organized, Rossen says. That background was important at Monte Verde because Tom knew the site was going to contain a fair amount of preserved plant life.
A fair amount turned out to be 72 different kinds of plants, including seeds, nuts, berries, and a specimen of wild potato carbon dated at 13,000 years old. That kind of abundance, says Rossen, is unheard of in archaeological science.
In addition to the plants, Dillehays team found a 20-foot long tentlike structure of wood and animal hides, a human footprint small enough to be a childs, two outdoor hearths, more than 700 finely crafted bone and stone tools, and hundreds of other artifacts.
Not only was the abundance of the findings extraordinary, so was their state of preservation. Normally, plants and other organic materials break down over time, but fallen logs had dammed the creek along which the settlement was founded. Peat moss began building up, and within months the site turned into a bog and had to be abandoned. An air-tight insulator, the peat kept biodegradable material from decaying. Dillehay and his researchers found themselves excavating a mummified village.
Everything was preserved, Rossen says. We used dental picks to excavate it, thats how meticulous we were.
That attention to detail paid off. On the floor of what had been a wishbone-shaped structure, Rossen and his colleagues uncovered scatterings of bite-sized lumps shaped like half moons.
The wishbone structure was most likely a medicine hut, Rossen says. And the lumps turned out to be chewed cuds containing five species of seaweed mixed with a variety of purgatives, antibiotics, and other medicinal plants.
That was remarkable, Rossen says, because at the time of its habitation, Monte Verde was 50 miles from the nearest sea coast. More remarkable: some of the seaweed was from rocky coasts, some from sandy coasts, and some of the plants came from as far as 250 miles away. Even more remarkable: the array of plants included species that werent available year-round. Theyd been harvested at different times of the year.
Thats how we know the people who settled Monte Verde stayed there all year long, Rossen says. That also tells us they werent colonizers because people who are just settling into a place dont have detailed knowledge of their surroundings. Nor do they have the kinds of established social and trade networks that can bring in plant species from remote locations. The people who lived at Monte Verde had been there a while.
How long was a while? According to the carbon-dated objects at the site, at least 12,500 years. Aha! A human settlement was thriving in southern Chile 500 years before the first settlers were supposed to have crossed a land bridge 10,000 miles to the north.
Finding a site older than Clovis was a complete paradigm shift, and a lot of people didnt want to go along with it, Rossen says. Showing that humans had been living in the Americas a lot longer than anyone imagined was very controversial and required a very high standard of proof.
That standard included a 1,000-page research report circulated among leading archaeologists. For years, experts scrutinized the data from the Monte Verde digs, and in 1997, after what Pulitzer Prizewinning journalist John Noble Wilford called a pitched intellectual battle. . . over when people first inhabited the Americas, a team of archaeologists sponsored by the National Geographic Society and Dallas Museum of Natural History visited the site. The report they issued vindicated the findings at Monte Verde.
Monte Verde is real, wrote Alex W. Barker, chief curator of the Dallas Museum of Natural History. Its old. And its a whole new ball game.
Since then, about 25 sites including two in Brazil and another on an island off the California coast have been discovered that also pre-date Clovis. In addition, objects from a deeper layer at Monte Verde have been carbon dated to be nearly 33,000 years old. In other words, people were established in South America almost 22,000 not just 1,300 years before Clovis.
In case anyones still not totally convinced, evidence from those digs in the 1980s is still coming in. In the May 2008 issue of Science, an article co-authored by Dillehay, Rossen, and others presented a recently completed study of nine species of seaweed found at Monte Verde, including microscopic particles ingrained along the edge of a stone tool. The study confirmed the original findings.
Originally, we collected more material than we had time to study, Rossen says. But archaeological projects never end. The analysis continues years after the excavations are done. Theres always something more you can do with the material.
Though archaeologists are now convinced of the coastal route, theyre still sorting out the details. For example, where and how did those early hunter-gatherers stop floating down the coast, foray inland, and settle? Its hard to tell, since sea levels have risen over the millennia. Sites where ancient people could have established coastal communities are now 200 feet under water. The step-by-step movements of ancient Americans may never be precisely mapped, but Rossen isnt discouraged.
Knowing how these people lived is more important than knowing every detail of how they got there, because ancient people have a lot to teach us, he says. During 99 percent of our history, humans have been hunter-gatherers or more accurately, gatherer-hunters and were still that way at heart. We may live in large cities, but we still function best in groupings of 15 to 20 people. And the way we run errands finding where the bargains are, who has the best service, where the best food is replicates the behaviour patterns of people who know where to go when potatoes are in season, where the best wood is, and which berries to pick.
Ancient people can also teach us a thing or two about medicine.
Some of the plants we found at Monte Verde are currently being used in commercial cough syrup, Rossen says. Also, because a lot of the food plants used at Monte Verde have an amazingly high nutritional value, those nutrients can treat contemporary people suffering from vitamin deficiencies.
Among those plants: seaweed.
Seaweed fills the same nutritional gaps now as it did 20,000 years ago, Rossen says. I recommend it. It tastes great.
Monte Verde II wishbone-shaped structure thought to be a medicinal hut and containing several masticated seaweed cuds. Courtesy of Tom Dillehay, Vanderbilt University
View of a rocky shoreline in the inland Seno de Reloncavi Marine Estuary south of Monte Verde. Image courtesy of Mario Pino.
PaleoPing...
DNA of Tierra del Fuego peoples proved they are related to aborigines of Australia.
Turns all that speculation about the northern route on its ear.
Fifteen thousand years ago the sea level was 400 feet lower than it is today. A great deal of the earth’s water was locked up in ice. A northern route may have been impassable, but the Australian aborigines traveled to Australia 40,000 years ago. By water.
DNA indicates they traveled a great deal further than that.
Thanks for posting this. It is very important.
Ping to an important historical finding.
Excellent article. Thanks for the ping.
His major thesis was hard to argue with: the most advanced remnants of ancient precolumbian peoples are concentrated between Mexico City and Northern Chile. Under what logic would an ancient civilization bypass mild climates on what is now the American Pacific coast and migrate thousands of miles southward to build their greatest cities in the jungles? It just doesn't make sense.
Good article. I have never believed the story of man following migrating animals across better than 1000 miles of ice. Man might be able to carry provisions... but what, pray tell, were the migrating animals eating? The primary migratory animal presented was the Mammoth, which must consume tens of pounds of food a day - Grasses don’t grow on deep ice.
It makes more sense to me that they were on boats, following migrations of fish or hunting seals along the edge of the ice, if there weren’t full ocean-going vessels by then...
Sorry, but this comment, unrelated to the main theme, spoils an otherwise excellent article. Already at the time Eratosthenes calculated the circumference of the Earth (240 BC), most educated people knew it was round. The myth that most people believed the Earth was flat is an 19th-century invention. See Jeffrey Russel's book INVENTING THE FLAT EARTH for details.
I have to disagree with your professor. The major civilizations of the Americas were near those places with the greatest net primary production (food to feed the cities), and close to those areas where the two primary staple food crops of the Americas originated. Corn was first domesticated by accounts I have read in southern Mexico, and the other primary starch, Potatoes originated in the Andes highlands. A city cannot exist without a surplus from the farming areas around it.
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Thanks Renfield. I kelp believe you beat me to the posting. ;') |
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