Posted on 05/19/2012 6:17:52 AM PDT by SunkenCiv
...The team's results indicate several new genetic markers that define previously unknown branches of the family tree of circumarctic groups. One marker, found in the Inuvialuit but not the other two groups, suggests that this group arose from an Arctic migration event somewhere between 4,000 and 8,000 years ago, separate from the migration that gave rise to many of the speakers of the Na-Dene language group.
"If we're correct, [this lineage] was present across the entire Arctic and in Beringia," Schurr said. "This means it traces a separate expansion of Eskimo-Aleut-speaking peoples across this region." ...
"Perhaps the most extraordinary finding to come out of these two studies is the way the traditional stories and the linguistic patterns correlate with the genetic data," Spencer Wells, Genographic Project director and National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence, said. "Genetics complements our understanding of history but doesn't replace other components of group identity."
(Excerpt) Read more at phys.org ...
Letter from Newfoundland: Homing in on the Red Paint People by Angela M.H. Schuster -- More than 5,000 years ago, this barren, sea-lashed coast was home to the Maritime Archaic Indians (MAI), who hunted and fished the coasts of Labrador and Newfoundland for more than 2,000 years. The first evidence of the Maritime Archaic culture was discovered more than 30 years ago when James A. Tuck of Memorial University of Newfoundland excavated 56 elaborate burials exposed during housing construction on a small promontory at Port au Choix, on the Gulf of St. Lawrence just south of the Strait of Belle Isle. Buried between 4400 and 3300 B.P., the dead -- along with offerings of tools, animal bones, carved animal effigies, and small, white quartz pebbles -- were covered in red ochre, earning them the moniker the "Red Paint People." Tool kits contained woodworking implements for building dwellings and watercraft; finely wrought bone and ivory fishhooks, harpoons, and harpoon heads, bone foreshafts; and long, narrow ground slate lances for hunting whale and walrus; and fragments of fish spears, all of which pointed to a lifeway dependent on the deep sea.
Priscilla Renouf points to 5,500-year-old archaeological features. (Angela M.H. Schuster)
Mystery Of The Lost Red Paint People Study Guide
http://www.bullfrogfilms.com/guides/paintguide.pdf
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GGG managers are SunkenCiv, StayAt HomeMother & Ernest_at_the_Beach | |
To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list. |
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What lush, green grass. I covet that lawn.
:’)
You too can have that lush, green lawn that you’ve always dreamed of! Just use Scotts DEAD PEOPLE FERTILIZER! One dead person can cover up to 2,000 square feet!
Feed your lawn, feed it!
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