1 / 33

Migration to the New World

Migration to the New World. When did people first appear in North America? Where did they come from? What did they look like? . When did people first appear in North America? . Part of a larger debated centered around two issues:

Mia_John
Download Presentation

Migration to the New World

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Migration to the New World When did people first appear in North America? Where did they come from? What did they look like?

  2. When did people first appear in North America? • Part of a larger debated centered around two issues: • The traditional, undisputed evidence for the presence of a fluted point manufacturing Clovis culture throughout most of the inhabitable continent between about 13,500-12,000 cal. (clovis/short chronology) • New evidence of sites in Americas dating to 19 and 15 kya. (pre-clovis/long chronology)

  3. Climatological/Migration evidence for modern Humans in the New World • Earliest modern humans outside Africa ca. 100,000 • The last lands to inhabit: • Sumatra and Borneo • before 20,000 B.P. connected by land bridge to SE Asia • People could walk to new areas. • Sea level was much lower because water taken up in polar ice. • Approximately 120 meters lower than at present. • Oldest Australians-35 kya • How did they get there and where did they come from? • Invention of water transport (boats), modern computer simulations have shown that at certain times of the year it would take seven days to go from Borneo/Java to Australia/New Guinea (55 miles of open water).

  4. North America • Peaks of glacial max-lower sea levels • Siberia and Alaska connected by Bering Land Bridge • Ca. 50,000 ya during the “Happy” interval of Pleistocene (level 200 ft lower) • Ca. 20,000 ya during the Duvanny Yar Interval (level 300 ft lower)

  5. Two Conflicting Theories • The antiquity of the earliest Americans is controversial, much debate • Short Chronology (Clovis) • No evidence of humans in New World before 12-13 kya. • Long Chronology (Pre-Clovis) • Humans in many migrations in New World, as early as 20 kya.

  6. Short Chronology (Clovis) • No evidence of humans in New World before 12-13 kya. • Crossed Bering Land Bridge during last glacial maximum, moved between major ice sheets-Laurentide (C. Canada), Labrador (E. Canada), and Cordilleran (W. Canada). All touched at glacial maximum. • Ice free areas developed during last periods (20-12 kya) and people crossed Beringia, following larger herds of bison, Mammoth, and Mastodon. • People carried large spears-Clovis Points and lived in highly mobile groups traveling rapidly across unglaciated N. America into S. America in very short period of time. Called the Paleoindians. • Possible that the rapid expansion of humans in conjunction with warmer climate (ca 10 kya) caused extinction of megafauna in New World. • Many sites in New World date to this period-Clovis, NM; Blackwater Draw, NM; Kimmswick, Missouri (clovis and mastodon), Shoop, PA; Williamson, VA; Debert, Nova Scotia. Hundreds of Clovis points found isolated in N. Am.

  7. Possible Migration RoutesBering Land Bridge

  8. Clovis “Fluted” Technology Flute

  9. Long Chronology (Pre-Clovis) • Humans in many migrations in New World, as early as 20 kya. • Smaller groups than indicated by Clovis hypothesis, largely a wood and bone tool industry. Also chopper and scraper industry. • Postulated due to recent finds of sites which date to before 15 kya. • Meadowcroft Rockshleter, PA (16-19,5 kya) artifacts include stone blades, scrapers and knives. • Cactus Hill, VA (17 kya) • Wilson Butte Cave, Idaho (14,5 kya) • Most compelling are S. American sites • Flea Cave, Peru 14,7 kya • Pedra Furadarockshleter, Brazil 30-12 kya • Monte Verde, Chile excavated by Tom Dillehay • One area of site dates to ca. 13 kya houses, preserved by an overlayer of peat. Wood, bone, skin, meat, botanicals are extremely well preserved. • Ambiguous lower level of three possible cultural features and some stone tool fragments dated to 33 kya. Affiliation unclear, but more recent research suggests early dates very compelling.

  10. Pre-Clovis Sites

  11. Meadowcroft Rockshelter

  12. Meadowcroft Rockshelter

  13. Cactus Hill, VA

  14. Monte Verde, Chile

  15. Monte Verde, Chile

  16. Monte Verde, Chile

  17. Monte Verde Culture

  18. Asian-Coastal Western North America

  19. Asian-Coastal Western North America Tool found Submerged Underwater In coastal Pacific

  20. Atlantic Coastal Route

  21. Clovis vs. Solutrean Different shapes, but similar technology

  22. Inuit Skin boats

  23. Three wave theory • People came in three waves of migration • Amerinds (21,000+) • NaDene (ancestors of Navajo, Apache, and Dine) (12,000) • Eskimo-Aleut (6,000)

  24. Evidence for 3-wave • Biological Evidence • Very few skeletal remains dating to this time period (>9,000 B.P.). • Browns Valley, Wyoming • Horn Shelter, Texas • Hourglass Cave, Colorado • Spirit Cave, Nevada • Wizard Beach, Nevada • Gore Creek, British Columbia • Kennewick Man, Washington

  25. Evidence for 3-Wave • Genetic research. • mtDNA-mitochondria passed down by women, shows relationships. • All modern, native americans are descended from a single group of Asians. • But, earlier migrations of people from Europe could have died out.

  26. Evidence for 3-wave • Linguistic evidence • Glottochronology • Words change gradually but at steady rate • Comparison of contemporary native languages can give a time frame for their first divergence, and can say reconstruct proto-language • Linguistic evidence. Joseph Greenberg suggested three separate migrations: • Amerind before 11,000 BP, • Na-Denes (Athabaskan) ca. 9000 Bp, • and AleutEskimo about 4000 Bp.

  27. Kennewick Man • 9,300 year old skeleton discovered recently on Columbia river • Man killed by arrow • Physically appears Caucasian • Debate over race and who got here first • Did he represent a race of Europeans who were killed out or absorbed? • Probably not, but simply the fact that physical features can change greatly over 9 millennia in response to a new environment.

  28. Cat Scan Cascade Point

  29. Kennewick Man or Capt. Picard?

  30. Sundadont and Sinodont Kennewick/ Many Europeans Modern Native Americans

  31. Scientific Comparison • Comparisons of Kennewick skull with world populations suggest he looks most like the Ainu. • A sea hunting, fishing and trading people who are still centered on Hokkaido, the northern island of Japan.

  32. Kennewick not the only one:Spirit Cave Man ca. 9,100 BP. Kennewick

  33. Native American Position • Have been here “forever” • Emerged from earth or were dropped down from sky by creator • Bering Strait is a White Man’s myth • All human remains predating Europeans are Native American

More Related