Posted on 07/20/2004 3:03:17 PM PDT by blam
Scientific American shines spotlight on S.C. dig
By DOUG NYE
Television Editor
Posted on Tue, Jul. 20, 2004
About 12,000 years ago, the first people to journey to the American continents did so by crossing the Bering land bridge from Asia. At least, thats what archaeologists have long believed. But tonights edition of Scientific American Frontiers examines five archaeological sites that could prove that humans walked this land much earlier.
Among the digs spotlighted is USCs Topper excavation site in Allendale County, supervised by archaeologist Albert C. Goodyear, director of the Allendale Paleo-Indian Expedition of the S.C. Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology.
Goodyear thinks the findings there could prove that people set foot in America as many as 25,000 years ago.
If, in fact, these newly discovered sites date back to 25,000 years which they could we wont stop hearing about it for another 10 years, Goodyear said. This has put us with both feet into the issue of how and when our species radiated out from the Old World. The very idea that humans could have gotten here before the Paleo-Indians 12,000 years ago is like saying weve found life in outer space. Its so contrary to the last 75 years of research.
Tonights program also shows the impact this new theory has had on the archaeological world and the heated debate that has ensued. 9 p.m., PBS, WRLK-35, cable ch. 11, digital ch.801
Web | Results 1 - 9 of about 10 for +"scientific american" +preclovis. (0.29 seconds) |
The Monte Verde Site - Preclovis in South America? - Archaeology
... Interview with Jeff Leach Editor of Scientific American's Discovering Archaeology
Addendum by Stuart Fiedel Main critic of the Monte Verde site. ...
archaeology.about.com/library/excav/blmonteverde.htm - 15k -
preclovis
The Pre-Clovis. (Picture from Scientific American Discovering Archaeology: Issue
7 January/February from the article written by Kenneth B. Tankersley). ...
www.carleton.ca/Museum/beringia/preclovis.html - 3k -
native archaeology syllabus
... Read: Fagan (1995) C.4 Adavasio and Carlisle (1986) CLASS 7(TH/Sep 25) Preclovis
Continued: consideration of some alternative and perhaps ... Scientific American. ...
www-unix.oit.umass.edu/~akeene/ syllabi/native_archaeology%7F.html - 40k -
Allendale Paleoindian Expedition
... The evidence for PreClovis peoples was brought to an amazing height this
year, with the arrival of Scientific American and their filmmakers. ...
travel.moonstart.com/sc_allendale.html - 13k -
USC: USC TIMES: Short Article Title
... For online registration, go to www.preclovis.net/topper. ... CNN, US News & World Report,
Newsweek, National Geographic, New York Times, and Scientific American. ...
www.sc.edu/usctimes/articles/ 2002/2002-01/topper_conference_0102.html - 14k -
2004 ALLENDALE-EXPEDITION REGISTRATION
... The National Geographic, the New York Times, Scientific American and Science ... the Expedition
will continue exploring the Clovis and preClovis occupations at the ...
allendale-expedition.net/ - 8k -
Human evolution and molecular biology - informal notes
... The cultural inflection in Japan is not as great as between preclovis and clovis
america, but this could be due to the ... Scientific American Library, New York. ...
home.att.net/~DNAPaleoAnth/MoleCalib.html - 84k -
[PDF] UNIVERSIDAD NACIONAL DE LA PLATA
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... OcupaciÛn preClovis? Clovis-Folsom. Conceptos. ... Agnew, N. Y M. Demas 1998 Preserving
the Laetoli Footprints, Scientific American 279(3):26-37. Page 11. ...
www.fcnym.unlp.edu.ar/catedras/prehistoria/programa.pdf -
Bone, Boats, and Bison
... Related Resources ï Clovis-PreClovis Debate ï Prehistoric Cultures ï Paleoindian
and ... such as Archaeology and Scientific American's Discovering Archaeology ...
www.anthropology.about.com/ cs/clovispreclovis/fr/dixon.htm - 27k - Supplemental Result -
sorry, I mean to address this shorter one to the list.Conference to present evidence for Ice Age man in South CarolinaThe Topper Site, named for forester David Topper who pointed it out years ago, has yielded artifacts that reveal the presence of human beings in the Western Hemisphere 16,000 or more years ago during the last Ice Age. The site is considered to be among the four most important sites in North America for early human being occupation studies.
U of South Carolina
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Viruses May Offer New Line of EvidenceFor example, one type of the virus exists in people living along the Pacific coast of the Americas, he told scientists attending a session on genetic research. Its presence suggests the possibility "that the original settlement of the Americas might have been along an area that is now flooded, and that American Indians moved into both continents simultaneously -- or even South America first." Black said that populations of eastern Siberia do not have the virus, "so they must have come in after the migration to the Americas." Further, he said, the variations of the virus suggest that the three-wave theory of aboriginal settlement of the Americas is not an adequate explanation... Robert Foley of the University of Cambridge said in a presentation delivered by a colleague that genetics can only tell us about past populations that left descendants. Genetics, he noted, reveal nothing about peoples that died out. Applied to the study of early populations of the Americas, for example, Foley's message implies that the range of variation in past populations could be quite different than the range of variation now observed among living Native American populations.
Mammoth Trumpet
Vol 11, no 3 (1996)
I bookmarked this thread to my profile page.
So, what's your take on this statement? Did the diggers ignore sites in the past that did not conform to their preconceived notions or what? Maybe I shouldn't be so put out with the bone diggers, but something just doesn't smell right.
FGS
Is that going to be on SC PBS?
You missed it, it was on last night.
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Retracing the footprints of timeDirect radiocarbon dating of the Calgary site is not possible because the ancient artifacts were not found in conjunction with organic matter, such as bones or decayed plant matter, which is necessary for such testing. Absent such verification, Prof. Young dismisses the find. For one thing, he says, the artifacts are so simple they could merely be naturally-occurring rocks; he says that most informed scientists are doubtful they are tools. And even if they are tools, he adds that there is no way to be sure that they were originally situated where they were found under the gravel, since the site has served as an exposed gravel pit for the last 100 years. Comments Prof. Young: "Any dude could have put that rock there."
by Steve Sandford
September 9, 1996
web archive version
this appears to be the oldest FR topic about Al Goodyear:
Site Sheds Light on Human Arrival
Source: AP via Yahoo
Published: May 26, 2001
Posted on 05/27/2001 06:25:12 PDT by sarcasm
http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a3b11003848e1.htm
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