Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-ttngx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-16T18:41:00.646Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

2.14 - Initial Peopling of the Americas: Context, Findings, and Issues

from VI. - The Americas

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2014

Michael B. Collins
Affiliation:
University of Texas, Austin
Colin Renfrew
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Get access

Summary

Introduction

The peopling of Australia and the Americas occurred after fully modern humans had evolved. Most of tropical and temperate Africa, Europe and Asia were peopled long before Australia, the last of the major Old World regions to be occupied, was colonised around fifty thousand years ago. Between 50,000 and 30,000 bp, humans with sophisticated cultural equipment were pressing into colder latitudes of northern Eurasia and had developed watercraft capable of near-shore maritime travel. Ocean margins were becoming part of the human niche. Glacial conditions advanced southwards from the Arctic 30,000 to 22,000 bp and then retreated by 13,000 bp, greatly affecting plants, animals and humans in the Northern Hemisphere.

Arriving at, and colonising, the Americas is a significant but not extraordinary chapter in human history – just another step in a long evolutionary journey. Humans were biologically and culturally preadapted to vast temperate and tropical areas of this hemisphere. These were in reach when human technology overcame harsh Arctic and Sub-Arctic marine and terrestrial environments and tapped rich circumpolar marine resources of fish, sea mammals, birds and land mammals. Some species of fish, sea mammals and birds occur in these northern waters in staggering numbers. These resources would be irresistible challenges to human ingenuity. Colonisers of the Americas were fully adapted to northern latitudes, were equipped with boats and possessed all of the ingenuity of modern humans. Colonisation may have come by way of the Pacific, the Atlantic or both.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adovasio, J. M. & Carlisle, R. C. 1988. The Meadowcroft Rockshelter. Science 239 (4841): 713–14.Google Scholar
Adovasio, J. M. & Page, J. 2002. The First Americans. Random House: New York.
Anderson, A. D. 1975. The Cooperton mammoth: an early man bone quarry. Great Plains Journal 14 (2): 130–73.Google Scholar
Beck, C. & Jones, G. T. 2010. Clovis and western stemmed: population migration and the meeting of two technologies in the intermountain west. American Antiquity 75 (1): 81–116.Google Scholar
Bonnichsen, R., Lepper, B. T., Stanford, D. & Waters, M. R. (eds.) 2005. Paleoamerican Origins: Beyond Clovis. Center for the Study of the First Americans: College Station, TX.
Bradley, B. A., Collins, M. B. & Hemmings, A. 2010. Clovis Technology. Archaeological Series no. 17, International Monographs in Prehistory: Ann Arbor.
Bradley, B. A. & Stanford, D. 2004. The north Atlantic ice-edge corridor: a possible Paleolithic route to the New World. World Archaeology 36 (4): 459–78.Google Scholar
Cione, A. L., Tonni, E. P. & Soibelzon, L. 2003. The broken zig-zag: Late Cenozoic large mammal and tortoise extinction in South America. Revista del Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales n.s. 5 (1): 1–19.Google Scholar
Clague, J. J., Mathewes, R. W. & Ager, T. A. 2004. Environments of northwestern North America before the Last Glacial Maximum, pp. 63–94 in (Madsen, D. B., ed.) Entering America: Northeast Asia and Beringia before the Last Glacial Maximum. University of Utah Press: Salt Lake City.
Clark, G. A., Barton, C. M., Pearson, G. A. & Yesner, D. R. 2004. Interdisciplinary perspective on long-term human biogeography and the Pleistocene colonization of the Americas, pp. 1–8 in (Barton, C. M., Clark, G. A., Yesner, D. R. & Pearson, G. A., eds.) The Settlement of the American Continents. University of Arizona Press: Tucson.
Coles, J. M. & Higgs, E. S. 1969. Archaeology of Early Man. Praeger: New York.
Collins, M. B., Waters, M. R., Goodyear, A. C., Stanford, D. J., Petierra, T. & Goebel, T. 2008. 2008 Paleoamerican origins workshop: a brief report. Current Research in the Pleistocene 25: 195–7.Google Scholar
Coltorti, M. G., Ficcarelli, H., Mahren, M., Moreno Espinosa, L., Rook, L. & Torre, D. 1998. The last occurrence of Pleistocene megafauna in the Ecuadorian Andes. Journal of South American Earth Sciences 11 (6): 581–6.Google Scholar
Davis, L. B. 1993. Paleoindian archaeology in the High Plains and Rocky Mountains of Montana, pp. 273–7 in (Soffer, O. & Praslov, N. D., eds.) From Kostenki to Clovis: Upper Paleolithic-Paleoindian Adaptations. Plenum: New York.
Dennell, R. & Hurcombe, L. 1995. Comment on Pedra Furada. Antiquity 69: 264.Google Scholar
Dillehay, T. D. 1989. Monte Verde: A Late Pleistocene Settlement in Chile, vol. 1. Palaeoenvironment and Site Context. Smithsonian Institution Press: Washington, DC.
Dillehay, T. D. 1997. Monte Verde: A Late Pleistocene Settlement in Chile, vol. 2. The Archaeological Context and Interpretation. Smithsonian Institution Press: Washington, DC.
Dillehay, T. D. 2000. The Settlement of the Americas: A New Prehistory. Basic Books: New York.
Dillehay, T. D. 2009. Probing Deeper into First American Studies. Available at .
Dillehay, T. D., Calderón, G. A., Politis, G. & Beltrão, M. C. 1992. Earliest hunters and gatherers of South America. Journal of World Prehistory 6 (2): 145–204.Google Scholar
Dillehay, T. D., Ramirez, C., Pino, M., Collins, M. B., Rossen, J. & Pino-Navarro, J. D. 2008. Monte Verde: seaweed, food, medicine, and the peopling of South America. Science 320 (5877): 784–6.Google Scholar
Dixon, E. J. 1993. Quest for the Origins of the First Americans. University of New Mexico Press: Albuquerque.
Dixon, E. J. 1999. Bones, Boats, and Bison: Archaeology and the First Colonization of Western North America. University of New Mexico Press: Albuquerque.
Dunbar, J. S. 2006. Paleoindian Archaeology, pp. 403–35 in (Webb, S. D., ed.) First Floridians and Last Mastodons: The Page-Ladson Site in the Aucilla River. Springer: Dordrecht.
Erlandson, J. M. 2002. Anatomically modern humans, maritime voyaging, and the Pleistocene colonization of the Americas, pp. 59–92 in (Jablonski, N. G., ed.) The First Americans: The Pleistocene Colonization of the New World. Memoirs of the California Academy of Sciences no. 27: San Francisco.
Erlandson, J. M. & Fitzpatrick, S. M. 2006. Oceans, islands, and coasts: current perspectives on the role of the sea in human prehistory. Journal of Island & Coastal Archaeology 1: 5–32.Google Scholar
Erlandson, J. M., Graham, M. H., Bourque, B. J., Corbett, D., Estes, J. A. & Steneck, R. S. 2007. The kelp highway hypothesis: marine ecology, the coastal migration theory, and the peopling of the Americas. Journal of Island & Coastal Archaeology 2: 161–74.Google Scholar
Feathers, J. K., Rhodes, E. J., Hout, S. & McAvoy, J. M. 2006. Luminescence dating of a pre-Clovis occupation at the Cactus Hill Site, Virginia, USA. Quaternary Geochronology 1: 167–87.Google Scholar
Fedje, D. W. & Josenhans, H. 2000. Drowned forests and archaeology on the continental shelf of British Columbia, Canada. Geology 28 (2): 99–102.Google Scholar
Ferigolo, J. 1999. Late Pleistocene South-American land-mammal extinctions: the infection hypothesis. Quaternary of South America and Antarctic Peninsula 12: 279–310.Google Scholar
Gilbert, M. T. P., Jenkins, D. L., Götherström, A., Naveran, N., Sanchez, J. J., Hofreiter, M., Thomsen, P., Binladen, J., Higham, T. F. G., Yohe, R., Parr, R., Cummings, L. S. & Willerslev, E. 2008. DNA from pre-Clovis human coprolites in Oregon, North America. Available at .
Gilbert, M. T. P., Jenkins, D. L., Higham, T. F. G., Rasmussen, M., Malmström, H., Svensson, E. M., Sanchez, J. J., Cummings, L. S., Yohe, R. M., II, Hofreiter, M., Götherström, A. & Willerslev, E. 2009. Response to comment by Poinar et al.on “DNA from Pre-Clovis human coprolites in Oregon, North America”. Available at .
Gilbert, M. T. P., Kivisild, T., Grønnow, B., Andersen, P. K., Metspalu, E., Reidla, M., Tamm, E., Alelsson, E., Götherström, A., Campos, P. F., Rasmussen, M., Metspalu, M., Higham, T. F. G., Schwenninger, J.-L., Nathan, R., De Hoog, C.-J., Koch, A., Møller, L. N., Andreasen, C., Meldgaard, M., Villems, R., Bendixen, C. & Willerslev, E. 2008. Paleo-Eskimo mtDNA genome reveals matrilineal discontinuity in Greenland. Science 320 (5884): 1787–9.Google Scholar
Goebel, T. 2004. The search for a Clovis progenitor in Subarctic Siberia, pp. 311–56 in (Madsen, D. B., ed.) Entering America: Northeast Asia and Beringia before the Last Glacial Maximum. University of Utah Press: Salt Lake City.
Goebel, T., Waters, M. R. & O’Rourke, , D. H. 2008. The Late Pleistocene dispersal of modern humans in the Americas. Science 319 (5869): 1497–1502.
Goldberg, P., Berna, F. & Macphail, R. 2009. Comment on “DNA from Pre-Clovis human coprolites in Oregon, North America”. Available at .
Graham, R. W. & Lundelius, E. L. 1984. Coevolutionary disequilibrium and Pleistocene extinctions, pp. 223–49 in (Martin, P. S. & Klein, R., eds.) Quaternary Extinctions: A Prehistoric Revolution. University of Arizona Press: Tucson.
Grayson, D. K. & Meltzer, D. J. 2002. Clovis hunting and large mammal extinction: critical review of the evidence. Journal of World Prehistory 16 (4): 313–59.Google Scholar
Gruhn, R. 2004. Current archaeological evidence of Late-Pleistocene settlement of South America, pp. 27–34 in (Lepper, B. T. & Bonnichsen, R., eds.) New Perspectives on the First Americans. Center for the Study of the First Americans: College Station, TX.
Guidon, N., Pessis, A.-M., Parenti, F., Fontugue, M. & Guérin, C. 1996. Nature and age of the deposits in Pedra Furada, Brazil: reply to Meltzer, Adovasio & Dillehay. Antiquity 70: 408–21.Google Scholar
Gustafson, C. E., Gilbow, D. & Daugherty, R. D. 1979. The Manis mastodon site: early man on the Olympic Peninsula. Canadian Journal of Archaeology 3: 157–64.Google Scholar
Guthrie, R. D. 1984. Mosaics, allelochemics and nutrients: an ecological theory of Late Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions, pp. 259–98 in (Martin, P. S. & Klein, R., eds.) Quaternary Extinctions: A Prehistoric Revolution. University of Arizona Press: Tucson.
Haag, W. G. 1962. The Bering Strait land bridge. Scientific American 206 (1): 112–23.Google Scholar
Hannus, L. A. 1989. Flaked mammoth bone from the Lange/Ferguson Site, White River Badlands Area, South Dakota, pp. 395–412 in (Bonnichsen, R. & Sorg, M. H., eds.) Bone Modification. University of Maine Press, Center for the Study of the First Americans: Orono.
Haynes, G. 2002. The Early Settlement of North America: The Clovis Era. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge.
Hill, C. L. & Davis, L. B. 1998. Stratigraphy, AMS radiocarbon age, and stable isotope biogeochemistry of the Lindsay mammoth, eastern Montana. Current Research in the Pleistocene 15: 109–12.Google Scholar
Holen, S. R. 2006. Taphonomy of two Last Glacial Maximum mammoth sites in the central Great Plains of North America: a preliminary report on La Sena and Lovewell. Quaternary International 142–143: 30–43.Google Scholar
Ikawa-Smith, F. 2004. Humans along the Pacific margin of Northeast Asia before the Last Glacial Maximum: evidence for their presence and adaptations, pp. 285–309 in (Madsen, D. B., ed.) Entering America: Northeast Asia and Beringia before the Last Glacial Maximum. University of Utah Press: Salt Lake City.
Jackson, L. J. 2006. Fluted and Fishtail points from southern coastal Chile: new evidence suggesting Clovis- and Folsom-related occupations in southernmost South America, pp. 105–20 in (Morrow, J. E. & Gnecco, C., eds.) Paleoindian Archaeology: A Hemispheric Perspective. University Press of Florida: Gainesville.
Jenkins, D. L. 2007. Distribution and dating of cultural and paleontological remains at the Paisley Five Mile Point Caves in the Northern Great Basin, pp. 57–81 in (Graf, K. E. & Schmitt, D. M., eds.) Paleoindian or Paleoarchaic? Great Basin Human Ecology at the Pleistocene/Holocene Transition. University of Utah Press: Salt Lake City.
Johnson, E. 2001. Mammoth bone quarrying on the late Wisconsinan North American grasslands, pp. 439–43 in (Cavarretta, G., Giolia, P., Mussi, M. & Palombo, M. R., eds.) The World of Elephants: Proceedings of the First International Congress, 16–20 October 2001, Rome.
Jones, T. L., Fitzgerald, R. T., Kennett, D. J., Micsicek, J., Fagan, J., Sharp, J. & Erlandson, J. M. 2002. The Cross Creek Site (CA-SLO-1797) and its implications for New World colonization. American Antiquity 67 (2): 213–30.Google Scholar
Kemp, B. M., Malhi, R. S., McDonough, J., Bolnick, D. A., Eshleman, J. A., Rickards, O., Martinez- Labarga, C., Johnson, J. R., Lorenz, J. G., Dixon, E. J., Fifield, T. E., Heanon, T. H., Wood, R. et al. 2007. Genetic analysis of Early Holocene skeletal remains from Alaska and its implications for the settlement of the Americas. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 132: 605–21.Google Scholar
Koch, P. L. & Barnosky, A. D. 2006. Late Quaternary extinctions: state of the debate. Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics 37: 215–50.Google Scholar
Lavallée, D. 2000. The First South Americans: The Peopling of a Continent from the Earliest Evidence to High Culture. University of Utah Press: Salt Lake City.
Lourandos, H. 1997. Continent of Hunter-Gatherers: New Perspectives in Australian Prehistory. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge.
Lowery, D. L. 2009. Geoarchaeological Investigations at Selected Coastal Archaeological Sites on the Delmarva Peninsula: The Long Term Interrelationship between Climate, Geology, and Culture. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Delaware.
Lowery, D. L., O’Neal, M. A., Wah, J. S., Wagner, D. P. & Stanford, D. J. 2010. Late Pleistocene upland stratigraphy of the western Delmarva Peninsula, USA. Quaternary Science Reviews 29: 1472–80. doi:.
MacPhee, R. D. & Marx, P. A. 1997. The 40,000-year plague: humans, hyperdisease, and first contact extinctions, pp. 169–217 in (Goodman, S. M. & Patterson, B. D., eds.) Natural Change and Human Impact in Madagascar. Smithsonian Institution Press: Washington, DC.
Madsen, D. B. 2004. Colonization of the Americas before the Last Glacial Maximum: issues and problems, pp. 1–26 in (Madsen, D. B., ed.) Entering America: Northeast Asia and Beringia before the Last Glacial Maximum. University of Utah Press: Salt Lake City.
Markewich, H. W., Litwin, R. J., Pavich, M. J. & Brook, G. A. 2009. Late Pleistocene eolian features in southeastern Maryland and Chesapeake Bay region indicate strong WNW-NW winds accompanied growth of the Laurentide ice sheet. Quaternary Research 71 (3): 409–25.Google Scholar
Martin, P. S. 1984. Pleistocene overkill: the global model, pp. 354–403 in (Martin, P. S. & Klein, R. G., eds.) Quaternary Extinctions: A Prehistoric Revolution. University of Arizona Press: Tucson.
McAvoy, J. M. & McAvoy, L. D. 1997. Archaeological Investigations of site 44SX202, Cactus Hill, Sussex County, Virginia. Research Report Series no. 8, Virginia Department of Historic Resources: Richmond.
McDonald, J. N. 1984. The reordered North American selection regime and Late Quaternary megafaunal extinctions, pp. 404–39 in (Martin, P. S. & Klein, R. G., eds.) Quaternary Extinctions: A Prehistoric Revolution. University of Arizona Press: Tucson.
McDonald, J. N. 2000. An outline of the pre-Clovis archaeology of SV-2, Saltville, Virginia, with special attention to a bone tool dated 14,510 yr b.p. Jeffersoniana 9: 1–59.Google Scholar
Meltzer, D. J. 2009. First Peoples in a New World: Colonizing Ice Age America. University of California Press: Berkeley.
Meltzer, D. J., Adovasio, J. M. & Dillehay, T. D. 1994. On a Pleistocene human occupation at Pedra Furada, Brazil. Antiquity 68: 695–714.Google Scholar
Meltzer, D. J., Grayson, D. K., Ardila, G., Barker, A., Dincauze, D., Haynes, C. V., Mena, F., Núñez, L. & Stanford, D. J. 1997. On the Pleistocene antiquity of Monte Verde, southern Chile. American Antiquity 62 (4): 659–63.Google Scholar
Meneses Lage, M. C. S. 1999. Dating of the prehistoric paintings in the Serra da Capivara National Park, Brazil, pp. 49–52 in (Strecker, M. & Bahn, P., eds.) Dating and the Earliest Known Rock Art. Oxbow: Oxford.
Miller, S. J. 1989. Characteristics of mammoth bone reduction at Owl Cave, the Wasden Site, Idaho, pp. 129–39 in (Bonnichsen, R. & Sorg, M. H., eds.) Bone Modification. University of Maine Press, Center for the Study of the First Americans: Orono.
Nichols, J. 2002. The first American languages, pp. 273–93 in (Jablonski, N. G., ed.) The First Americans: The Pleistocene Colonization of the New World. Memoirs of the California Academy of Sciences no. 27: San Francisco.
NOAA 2009. Exploring the Submerged New World 2009. Available at .
Ochsenius, C. & Gruhn, R. (eds.) 1979. Taima-Taima: A Late Pleistocene Paleo-Indian Kill Site in Northernmost South America: Final Reports of 1976 Excavations. Programa CIPICS, monografías científicas, Universidad Francisco de Miranda: Coro.
O’Rourke, D. H. 2009. Human migrations: the two roads taken. Current Biology 19 (5): R203–5.Google Scholar
O’Rourke, D. H. & Raff, J. A. 2009. The human genetic history of the Americas: the final frontier. Current Biology 20 (4): R202–7.Google Scholar
Overstreet, D. F. & Kolb, M. F. 2003. Geoarchaeological contexts for Late Pleistocene archaeological sites with human-modified Wooly Mammoth remains in southeastern Wisconsin. Geoarchaeology 18 (1): 91–114.Google Scholar
Parenti, F. 2001. Le Gisement Quaternaire de Pedra Furada (Piauí, Brésil). Stratigraphie, chronologie, évolution culturelle. Editions Recherches sur les Civilisations: Paris.
Perego, U. A., Achilli, A., Angerhofer, N., Accetturo, M., Pala, M., Olivieri, A., Kashani, B. H., Ritchie, K. H., Scozzari, R., Kong, Q.-P., Myres, N. M., Salas, A., Semino, O., Bandelt, H.-J., Woodward, S. R. & Torroni, A. 2009. Distinctive Paleo-Indian migration routes from Beringia marked by two rare mtDNA haplogroups. Current Biology 19 (1): 1–8.Google Scholar
Pitulko, V. V., Nikolosky, P. A., Girya, E. Y., Basilyan, A. E., Tumskoy, V. E., Koulakov, S. A., Astakhov, S. N., Pavlova, E. Y. & Anisimov, M. A. 2004. The Yana RHS Site: humans in the Arctic before the Last Glacial Maximum. Science 303 (5654): 52–6.Google Scholar
Poinar, H., Fiedel, S., King, C. E., Devault, A. M., Bos, K., Kuch, M. & Debruyne, R. 2009. Comment on “DNA from Pre-Clovis human coprolites in Oregon, North America”. Available at .
Rasmussen, M., Cummings, L. S., Gilbert, M. T. P., Bryant, V., Smith, C., Jenkins, D. L. & Willerslev, E. 2009. Response to comment by Goldberg et al. on “DNA from Pre-Clovis human coprolites in Oregon, North America”. Available at .
Stanford, D. 1999. Paleoindian archaeology and Late Pleistocene environments in the plains and southwestern United States, pp. 281–339 in (Bonnichsen, R. & Turnmire, K. L., eds.) Ice Age Peoples of North America: Environments, Origins, and Adaptations. Oregon State University Press, Center for the study of the First Americans: Corvallis.
Stanford, D., Bonnichsen, R., Meggers, B. & Steele, D. G. 2005. Paleoamerican origins: models, evidence, and future directions, pp. 313–53 in (Bonnichsen, R., Lepper, B. T., Stanford, D. & Waters, M. R., eds.) Paleoamerican Origins: Beyond Clovis. Center for the Study of the First Americans: College Station, TX.
Steele, D. G. & Carlson, D. L. 1989. Excavation and taphonomy of mammoth remains from the Duewall Newberry Site, Brazos County, Texas, pp. 413–29 in (Bonnichsen, R., ed.) Bone Modification. Oregon State University, Center for the Study of the First Americans: Corvallis.
Waters, M. R. & Stafford, T. W., Jr. 2007. Redefining the age of Clovis: implications for the peopling of the Americas. Science 315: 1122–6.Google Scholar
Westley, K. & Dix, J. 2008. The Solutrean Atlantic hypothesis: a view from the ocean. Journal of the North Atlantic 1: 85–98.Google Scholar
Wormington, H. M. 1957. Ancient Man in North America. 4th ed. Denver Museum of Natural History: Denver.

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×