Posted on 10/24/2025 5:48:08 PM PDT by Red Badger

The First Peoples in the Americas probably came from East Asia. Image credit: APChanel/Shutterstock.com
The first people to enter the Americas may have sailed from Japan around 20,000 years ago, according to a new analysis of prehistoric stone tools from 10 sites across the US.
Until now, researchers had only uncovered a few tantalizing hints that humans had reached the American continent by this time, with ancient footprints in New Mexico representing the earliest evidence. However, with no widespread culture emerging in North America until the rise of the Clovis tradition some 13,000 years ago, scholars have remained divided on exactly when the first Americans appeared – and how they arrived.
According to the authors of the new study, though, there are now at least 10 known sites across the US bearing evidence of human occupation between 13,000 and 20,000 years ago. Five of these – located in Virginia, Idaho, Pennsylvania, and Texas – have even yielded enough stone tools to suggest that a technological industry – known as the American Upper Paleolithic – had spread across the region prior to the emergence of the Clovis culture.
To understand where this lithic tradition came from, the researchers turned to previous genetic studies, which suggest that the first people in the Americas probably descended from a group that lived in Northeast Asia around 25,000 years ago. Scanning the region’s archaeological record, they noted that Paleolithic hunting weapons – called bifaces – from the Japanese island of Hokkaido match those that characterize the American Upper Palaeolithic.
"The discovery of this archaeological connection rewrites the opening chapter of human history in the Americas," explained study author Loren Davis in a statement. "It shows that the First Americans were not cultural isolates, but participants in the same Paleolithic traditions that connected people across Eurasia and Asia."

Paleolithic tools from Idaho match those found in Hokkaido, Japan. Image credit: Oregon State University
Combining all of this evidence, the researchers propose that the first people in the Americas may have come from Hokkaido around 20,000 years ago. What’s more, because no Paleolithic tools have been found in the northernmost regions of Canada or Alaska, they suggest that prehistoric Asians probably didn’t reach America via the frozen land bridge that opened up in the Bering Strait during the last Ice Age.
Given that all the sites yielding such tools are found to the south of this ice-covered region, the study authors conclude that people probably sailed gradually from Hokkaido to North America, following the southern coastline of Beringia and stopping at numerous points along the way.
“We suggest that early seafarers, well adapted to the use of boats on the open ocean, probably followed a circum-Pacific coastal route into the Americas,” they write.
Highlighting the significance of these findings, Davis says that "we can now explain not only that the First Americans came from Northeast Asia, but also how they traveled, what they carried, and what ideas they brought with them."
"It's a powerful reminder that migration, innovation, and cultural sharing have always been part of what it means to be human," he said.
The study is published in the journal Science Advances.
Now THIS premise is based on science. I don’t know if the paper references the DNA study I referred to in a prior comment in another thread, but a group of researchers compared North American indigenous DNA to those of regions of South America - iirc - and found NO LINK between them.
South America was populated by seafaring peoples from the western South Pacific.
We’ve always been at war with East Asia.
I don’t think it took a lot of ingenuity to figure out how to make arrow heads and spear tips, so to credit that to one tribe that spread across the globe is a bit of a stretch.
If they sailed from Japan wouldn’t there be more findings in the NW US as opposed to NE as NW is closer?
All practically next door to one another.
So, one ship, with good sails. That would do it.
I, too, have been a proponent in the belief of multiple migrations to the Americas.
I pretty much concluded this already.
True. But there is a lot of speculation in what is currently considered history.
So whitey didn’t “steal” America from the Indians we “stole” it from the Japs?
So these folks came around 20k years ago, so the next question is where did the Clovis people come from, they’re around 16k years ago if I remember correctly. Are they the ones who it was suggested might be European? And a third question is what direction were the people traveling who left footprints in Mexico or Central America several millenia before the ones from Japan? Also are the Joman different from the Ainu?
So these folks came around 20k years ago, so the next question is where did the Clovis people come from, they’re around 16k years ago if I remember correctly. Are they the ones who it was suggested might be European? And a third question is what direction were the people traveling who left footprints in Mexico or Central America several millenia before the ones from Japan? Also are the Joman different from the Ainu?
How does this explaine the footprints in the SW of human footprints alongside of dinosour footprints?
The relatively crude Guadalupe Bi-face tools, found along the Guadalupe River in southern Texas are possibly from the Archaic period, millennia before the Clovis tools were made. Here are some pictures: https://www.texasbeyondhistory.net/theme/tools/images/Lithics-MB21.html
How does tool found on the east coast and central America imply they came from Japan? They went around the Cape? They just jumped over the mountains and skipped the west coast?
We don’t know that they’re the first.
Just that they are the first for whom we have evidence.
Science is only settled when it comes to liberal agendas.
The Hopis and Pueblos claim they came from a hole in the Grand Canyon, a “Sipapu”.
Any evidence of the ships they came on?
Well said.
Kind of like how they like to keep counting votes until they win. Then the election is settled.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.