I | INTRODUCTION |
First
Americans, the earliest humans to arrive in the Americas. The first
people to come to the Americas arrived in the Western Hemisphere during the late
Pleistocene Epoch (1.6 million to 10,000 years before present). Most scholars
believe that these ancient ancestors of modern Native Americans were
hunter-gatherers who migrated to the Americas from northeastern Asia.
For much of the 20th century it was widely
believed the first Americans were the Clovis people, known by their distinctive
spearpoints and other tools found across North America. The earliest Clovis
sites date to 11,500 years ago. However, recent excavations in South America
show that people have lived in the Americas at least 12,500 years. A growing
body of evidence—from other archaeological sites to studies of the languages and
genetic heritage of Native Americans—suggests the first Americans may have
arrived even earlier.
Many of the details concerning the first
settlement of the Americas remain shrouded in mystery. Today the search for
answers involves researchers from diverse fields, including archaeology,
linguistics, skeletal anatomy, and molecular biology. The challenge for
researchers is to find evidence that can help determine when the first settlers
arrived, how these people made their way into the Americas, and if migrating
groups traveled by different routes and in multiple waves. Some archaeologists
and physical anthropologists have suggested that one or more of these migrations
originated from places outside of Asia, although this view is not widely
accepted.
Whoever they were and whenever they arrived,
the first Americans faced extraordinary challenges. These hardy settlers
encountered a vast, trackless new world, one rich in animals and plants and yet
entirely without other peoples. As they entered new territories, they had to
locate essential resources, such as water, food, and materials to make or repair
their tools. They had to learn which of the unfamiliar animals and plants would
feed or cure them and which might hurt or kill them. Their efforts ultimately
proved successful. By the time European exploration of the Americas began in the
late 15th century, the descendants of these ancient colonizers numbered in the
millions.
II | THE LATE PLEISTOCENE |
From their evolutionary origins in Africa,
anatomically modern humans, Homo sapiens, steadily spread out across
Earth’s landmasses (see Human Evolution). By 25,000 to 35,000 years ago
humans had reached the far eastern reaches of modern Siberia in northeastern
Asia—a region believed to be the most likely point of departure for any early
migration to North America. Humans arrived in this remote corner of the world
during the last major period of the Pleistocene Epoch, or Ice Age (see
ice ages). Great glaciers covered much of the Northern Hemisphere at this
time. In North America two immense ice sheets, the Laurentide in the east and
the Cordilleran in the west, buried much of modern Canada and Alaska, as well as
northern portions of the continental United States.
Pleistocene climates and environments were
different than they are today, and so too was the Earth’s surface. Glaciers had
captured a significant amount of the world’s water on land. Because that water
no longer drained back to the oceans, worldwide sea levels dropped. Average sea
levels were as much as 135 m (440 ft) lower than they are today.
A | Beringia |
As sea levels fell, large expanses of
previously submerged continental shelf became dry land, including the area
beneath what is now the Bering Sea. This area formed a 1,600-km- (1,000-mi-)
wide land bridge that connected the northeastern tip of Asia and the western tip
of modern Alaska. Known as Beringia, this natural land bridge existed from about
25,000 to nearly 10,000 years ago. It was a flat, cold, and dry landscape,
covered primarily in grassland, with occasional shrubs and small trees. People
and animals could use Beringia to walk from Siberia to Alaska and back.
B | Possible Migration Routes |
Migrants from northeastern Asia could have
trekked to Alaska with relative ease when Beringia was above sea level. But
traveling south from Alaska to what is now the continental United States posed
significant challenges for any would-be colonizers. There were two possible
routes south for migrating people: down the Pacific coast, or by way of an
interior passage along the eastern flank of the Rocky Mountains. When the
Laurentide and Cordilleran ice sheets were at their maximum extent, both routes
were likely impassable. The Cordilleran reached across to the Pacific shore in
the west and its eastern edge abutted the Laurentide, near the present border
between British Columbia and Alberta.
B1 | Pacific Coast Route |
Geological evidence suggests the Pacific
coast route was open for overland travel before 23,000 years ago and after
14,000 years ago. During the coldest millennia of the last ice age, roughly
23,000 to 19,000 years ago, lobes of glaciers hundreds of kilometers wide flowed
down to the sea. Deep crevasses scarred their surfaces, making travel across
them dangerous. Even if people traveled by boat—a claim for which there is
currently no direct archaeological evidence—the journey would have been
difficult. There were almost certainly fleets of icebergs to outmaneuver. Rivers
of sediment draining Cordilleran glacial fields severely restricted the
availability of near-shore marine life, which early colonizers would have relied
on for nourishment. By 14,000 to 13,000 years ago, however, the coast was
ice-free. By then, too, the climate had warmed, and coastal lands were covered
in grass and trees. Hunter-gatherer groups could have readily replenished their
food supplies, repaired clothing and tents, and replaced broken or lost
tools.
B2 | Ice-Free Corridor |
The warming climate gradually opened a
second possible migration route through the massive frozen wilderness in the
continental interior. Geologic evidence indicates that by 11,500 years ago the
Cordilleran and Laurentide ice sheets had retreated far enough to open a
habitable ice-free corridor between them. By then, much of the exposed land was
probably restored enough to support plants and animals on which migrating
hunter-gatherer peoples depended.
III | ESTABLISHING A PLEISTOCENE PRESENCE IN THE AMERICAS |
A | Early Investigations |
Scientific inquiry into the peopling of
the Americas began in the 1870s. At that time, many scholars wondered if modern
humans had lived in the Americas for as long as they had in Europe, where
numerous Stone Age sites indicated a Pleistocene-era occupation. Excavations at
these sites revealed hand axes and other relatively simple stone tools, human
bones, and the remains of several now-extinct animals, including the woolly
mammoth. The discovery of Pleistocene-age animals alongside human bones and
artifacts helped 19th-century archaeologists establish the age of ancient human
encampments in Europe.
Yet, search as they might, American
archaeologists found no comparable evidence of a Pleistocene-era human presence.
But several sites revealed stone artifacts that some scholars believed looked
similar to the ancient stone tools found in Europe. On the basis of this
similarity, these experts claimed the American artifacts must be as old. By the
1890s, however, other scholars had challenged this claim. They argued the
American and European artifacts did not really look alike, and they noted the
American artifacts were of uncertain antiquity because none were found securely
embedded in Pleistocene-age geological deposits. A lengthy debate ensued between
those who saw evidence for ancient human settlement in the Americas and those
who did not. This debate—often loud and sometimes bitter—remained unresolved for
more than three decades.
B | Discovery at Folsom |
In 1927 archaeologists finally
demonstrated that humans had occupied the Americas during the Pleistocene. This
breakthrough occurred at a site discovered by ranch foreman George McJunkin near
Folsom in northeastern New Mexico. Excavations at the site uncovered a stone
projectile point embedded in the rib bones of a now-extinct bison—an ancestor of
the modern North American buffalo. It was clear that a human hunter had killed
this Pleistocene-era animal. The Folsom discovery proved beyond doubt that
humans had lived in the Americas since the last ice age.
The spearpoints used to bring down the
Folsom bison were distinctive, finely made points possessing a flute, or
channel, on each face. These Folsom points were quite unlike those of the
European Stone Age. American archaeologists coined the term Paleo-Indian
to identify the ancient Pleistocene Americans who had produced these
well-crafted artifacts.
C | Clovis: An Earlier Occupation |
In the decade after Folsom, more
Paleo-Indian sites were discovered. Some held Folsom spearpoints, but others
revealed larger, less finely made fluted points. These large points occasionally
appeared with the bones of mammoths. The first such find came to light in 1933
at a site near Clovis in eastern New Mexico, where archaeologists found
spearpoints and fossils in sediments below those that had produced Folsom
artifacts. This meant that the Clovis people, as they came to be known,
represented an even older Paleo-Indian culture. Just how much older was
determined soon after the development of radiocarbon dating in the late 1940s
(see Dating Methods). This modern dating technology showed that the
people who made Clovis artifacts had inhabited North America by about 11,500
years ago—some 600 years before the Folsom culture appeared.
IV | CLOVIS-FIRST THEORY |
The age of the earliest Clovis sites
coincided neatly with geological evidence that by 11,500 years ago the
Laurentide and Cordilleran ice sheets had retreated far enough to open a
habitable ice-free corridor—a fact first recognized by University of Arizona
archaeologist C. Vance Haynes. It appeared that Clovis groups had moved south
from Alaska through the continental interior right after it became possible to
do so. That no sites older than Clovis were found, at least initially, seemed to
confirm that Clovis people were the first colonizers of the Americas.
A | Rapid Migration |
Once they had traveled south of the ice
sheets, Clovis groups spread rapidly. Soon after 11,500 years ago, Clovis and
Clovis-like materials appear throughout North America. The oldest sites are in
the Great Plains and the southwestern United States; younger sites are found in
eastern North America. No subsequent group would achieve such a wide
distribution in North America. But Clovis groups did not stop in North America.
According to the Clovis-first theory, they must have continued on to
South America. As these groups pushed south, the traditional thinking went, they
developed different tools and other artifacts that were no longer readily
recognizable as Clovis. They arrived at Tierra del Fuego on the southern tip of
South America within 1,000 years of leaving Alaska.
The rapid dispersal of Clovis peoples
throughout the hemisphere was remarkable given the landscape they traversed. Not
only did they travel through desert, plains, and forest, they did so during the
environmental upheaval that marked the end of the last Ice Age. Climates were
growing warmer—drier in some areas and wetter in others—and the distributions of
plants and animals were shifting in complex ways in response to the changing
climates. As they entered each new habitat they must have quickly learned to
find suitable plant and animal foods. They would need stone to repair their
toolkits, freshwater to drink, and the ability to overcome environmental
challenges encountered along the way.
B | Big-Game Hunters |
A long-favored explanation for the rapid
spread of Clovis people was that they preyed on large animals, such as mammoth
and mastodon. These animals were themselves wide-ranging in their distribution.
Archaeologists believed a reliance on big-game hunting meant that Clovis groups
would have less need to learn about available local resources.
Archaeologists initially found some
support for the big-game hunting hypothesis in archaeological excavations, as
well as in the Clovis toolkit itself. Along the San Pedro River in Arizona, for
example, are four Clovis sites separated by less than 20 km (12 mi). Each site
yielded Clovis points embedded in the skeletons of mammoths. So similar are the
points at these sites that they may be the handiwork of a single group, which
obviously found good hunting in the area. The artifacts at San Pedro and other
Clovis sites include a variety of tools handy for hunting, killing, and
butchering game animals. There are the distinctive fluted spearpoints, shown
experimentally by University of Wyoming archaeologist George Frison to be
capable of bringing down elephant-sized animals. In addition, there are stone
knives, scrapers, gravers (tools for scoring bone), drills, and a few
preserved artifacts of ivory and bone. These tools, which occur in Clovis sites
across North America, support the view that Clovis peoples were practicing the
same way of life.
Clovis tools were typically made of
superior quality fine-grained stone, including chert, jasper, and chalcedony.
Such stone is durable and readily flaked by skilled toolmakers into a desired,
sharp-edged form. More important, it is easily resharpened and reused. That
would be important to hunters pursuing wide-ranging big game. They could
continue to use their stone tools as they tracked game far from the quarries
where they acquired their stone. Analysis of these tools suggests that Clovis
groups commonly traveled distances of 300 km (185 mi). In one instance, a dozen
Clovis points quarried from the Texas Panhandle were left as a cache in
northeastern Colorado, 485 km (300 mi) away. These distances indicate a range of
movement across the landscape far greater than is observed in later periods of
American prehistory.
C | Big-Game Extinctions |
The idea that Clovis people were big-game
hunters could help explain an unsolved puzzle of the Americas in the late
Pleistocene: the catastrophic extinction of dozens of species of large animals.
Across the Americas millions of large animals—known as
megafauna—disappeared. These animals included the mammoth, mastodon, and
the giant ground sloth, as well as the horse, the camel, and many other
herbivores. Some very large and formidable carnivores also died out, including
the American lion, the saber-toothed tiger, and the giant short-faced bear.
These extinctions were thought to coincide with the arrival of Clovis groups, a
chronological coincidence that led University of Arizona ecologist Paul Martin
to propose the hypothesis of Pleistocene overkill. This hypothesis, first put
forward in 1967, contends that Clovis big-game hunters caused the extinctions.
Martin suggested that overkill was especially likely—even inevitable—if Clovis
groups were the first Americans. For if the megafauna had never before faced
human hunters, they would have been especially vulnerable prey to this new,
dangerous, two-legged predator.
V | CHALLENGES TO CLOVIS-FIRST |
For decades the Clovis-first theory seemed to
fit well with the available geologic and archaeological evidence. However, some
archaeologists always harbored doubts about the Clovis-first scenario. These
doubts intensified toward the end of the 20th century. A reassessment of Clovis
subsistence led many to challenge the traditional view of Clovis people as
big-game hunting specialists. In addition, the discovery of a pre-Clovis human
presence in the Americas has undermined the claim that Clovis people were the
first Americans.
A | A Broader View of Clovis Subsistence |
Since the 1980s there has been increasing
skepticism about the traditional view that Clovis groups were dependent on
big-game hunting. Despite many years of searching, few Clovis archaeological
sites have yielded evidence to support this view. The San Pedro Valley sites
have proved to be the exception, not the rule. There are scarcely a dozen Clovis
big-game kill sites known, mostly in western North America, with two possible
kill sites in eastern North America. These contain the skeletal remains of just
two of the Pleistocene megafauna—mammoth and mastodon. Clovis people did kill
big game, but apparently not as often as once supposed.
A1 | Diverse Diet |
A broader view of Clovis subsistence now
suggests that they often targeted slower, smaller, less dangerous prey. The
roasted remains of turtles, for example, have been found at many sites,
including Aubrey and Lewisville in Texas, Little Salt Spring in Florida, and
even at the original Clovis site in New Mexico. Other sites indicate that the
diet in Clovis times included small- and medium-sized mammals, such as beaver,
snowshoe hare, and caribou, as well as fish and a variety of gathered
plants.
A2 | Big-Game Extinctions: Other Causes |
Over time, it also became clear that the
Pleistocene overkill hypothesis was not strongly supported by the archaeological
record. Archaeologists have yet to document a single Clovis sloth kill, horse
kill, camel kill, or a kill of any of the other several dozen megafaunal
species. Whatever caused the extinction of these animals, it was not human
hunting. Scientists are currently pursuing alternative hypotheses to explain
megafaunal extinctions, such as the possibility they were caused by late
Pleistocene climatic and environmental change, or perhaps disease. The puzzle
remains unsolved.
A3 | Multipurpose Toolkit |
A revised view of Clovis subsistence
coincides with a reevaluation of the Clovis toolkit. Analysis of Clovis
spearpoints shows they were adequate weapons for bringing down big game, but
they were not always used that way. Few spearpoints show the kinds of damage
that routinely occurs when stone projectiles meet animal bone. Clovis points,
like many items in the Clovis toolkit, were most likely used as multipurpose
tools; many spearpoints show wear patterns indicating they were used as knives.
There is also more variety in the Clovis toolkit than traditionally supposed.
Clovis groups in different areas occasionally fashioned tools needed for
particular tasks in the environments in which they found themselves. In
addition, they probably made tools—perhaps wooden digging sticks or woven plant
fiber nets with which to catch fish or small game—that have not been preserved
from that remote time. A varied, multipurpose toolkit is to be expected of
groups that hunt and gather a range of foods.
A4 | Clovis Explorers |
If they were not pursuing wide-ranging
big game, why were Clovis groups moving such great distances across the
landscape? The answer may be exploration. Hunter-gatherer peoples need to know
where to go when resources in one location begin to diminish, as animals are
hunted out or flee and as available plants are gathered up. For colonizers in an
unfamiliar landscape, that means ranging widely across newly discovered lands to
see what resources occur where, when, and in what abundance. Not knowing where
they might encounter stone to refurbish their tools on their journeys, it is not
surprising that Clovis explorers selected only the highest quality stone for
their toolkits, or that they left caches of tools along their way—as the cache
in Colorado demonstrates. They could return to the caches to replace diminished
supplies without having to walk all the way back to a distant stone quarry.
B | Pre-Clovis Settlement of the Americas |
Claims of a pre-Clovis human occupation in
the Americas have been around for decades. By the 1980s, dozens of such sites
had been reported, some estimated to be as much as 200,000 years old.
Archaeologists have carefully scrutinized
each site to determine if three basic criteria are present. Sites lacking all
three criteria cannot be accepted as valid. First, the site must have genuine
artifacts produced by humans or human skeletal remains. Second, these artifacts
or remains must be found in unmixed geological deposits to ensure that younger
objects are not accidentally buried in older layers of sediment. Third, these
artifacts or remains must be accompanied by reliable radiocarbon dates that
indicate a pre-Clovis occupation. For decades all sites reputed to be of
pre-Clovis age failed to meet these criteria. All, that is, except one.
B1 | Breakthrough at Monte Verde |
In the mid-1970s University of Kentucky
archaeologist Tom Dillehay began excavating at Monte Verde, a site on the banks
of Chinchihuapi Creek in southern Chile. Monte Verde is an extraordinary site.
Unusual geological conditions quickly buried the remains of an ancient camp
beneath wet, swampy sediments. Since the remains left on the surface by the
site’s inhabitants were not exposed to the air, many organic remains—which
normally decay and disappear—were preserved.
Dillehay’s team found an astonishing
array of organic materials. These included wooden foundation timbers of roughly
rectangular huts, finely woven string, and chewed leaves, seeds and other plant
parts from nearby species—many with food or medicinal value. In addition,
excavations revealed burned bones of mastodon along with pieces of its meat and
hide. Some bits of hide still clung to pieces of wooden timbers, the apparent
remnants of hide-coverings that once draped over the huts. Also found was the
footprint of a child in the once-sticky mud, an assortment of hearths, and
hundreds of stone, bone, and wood artifacts. Dillehay’s team firmly radiocarbon
dated these organic remains to 12,500 years ago—1,000 years before Clovis
times.
The excavations at Monte Verde lasted
nearly a decade, and the laboratory research, analysis, and writing about what
Dillehay’s team had found took another dozen years. Dillehay’s findings had to
be carefully studied and presented in order to overcome the skepticism of
archaeologists who had grown accustomed to seeing pre-Clovis claims fail. When
Dillehay’s second book on the results of his investigations appeared in 1997,
most archaeologists were convinced; the Clovis barrier had fallen at last.
B2 | Other Possible Pre-Clovis Sites |
Since Monte Verde, several new candidates
for a pre-Clovis settlement in North America have appeared. The Cactus Hill site
in Virginia has yielded artifacts below layers in which Clovis-like fluted
points were found. Precisely how old those more deeply buried artifacts might be
is uncertain, however. The layer in which they were found has produced widely
varying radiocarbon ages, from 16,000 years ago to modern times. It therefore
remains unclear how old these artifacts might be. Archaeologists have also
refocused attention on the Meadowcroft Rockshelter in Pennsylvania. Excavations
at Meadowcroft in the 1970s and 1980s produced unmistakable artifacts in
deposits perhaps as much as 14,250 years old. Questions remain, however, about
whether the artifacts and organic remains are as old as the radiocarbon-dated
charcoal. For the time being, neither site, nor any of the other sprinkling of
recent pre-Clovis claims, is fully accepted by a still-cautious archaeological
community.
VI | THE FIRST AMERICANS: ALTERNATIVE THEORIES |
The excavations at Monte Verde conclusively
demonstrated that people inhabited the Americas in pre-Clovis times. But Monte
Verde also raised many new questions about the first Americans. Several new
theories have been advanced to explain the identity, antiquity, and entryway of
the first Americans.
Most archaeologists believe the first
Americans—whether traveling in a single migration or multiple
migrations—originated in northeastern Asia. This view is based mainly on
geological evidence that a land bridge once connected Asia and North America and
on genetic similarities between northeastern Asian peoples and Native Americans.
It is not, however, founded on any direct archaeological evidence. The kinds of
tools typical of the Monte Verde site or Clovis culture are not found in either
northeastern Asia or Beringia. But Monte Verde is far from that region and in a
very different environmental setting, so it is not surprising its artifacts are
different.
Although archaeologists have yet to find a
single Clovis spearpoint in northeastern Asia, one artifact comes close: a stone
point from the site of Uptar in Siberia that has a flute on one face. But the
age of the spearpoint is unknown, and it is not otherwise similar to Clovis
fluted points. There are archaeological sites in Alaska, such as the Nenana
Complex, that slightly predate Clovis. However, these sites lack the hallmark of
Clovis technology: fluted stone projectile points. A few Clovis-like fluted
points have been found in Alaska, but these are younger, not older, than those
to the south.
The absence of similar artifacts in Siberia
or Alaska is not surprising. Finding archaeological traces of a small group, or
several groups, that briefly passed through this vast area is a difficult task.
In addition, the most recognizable feature of the first Americans’
toolkit—fluted spearpoints in the case of the Clovis people—may not have been
invented until the migrants reached what is now the continental United States.
For a few archaeologists, however, the lack of Clovis spearpoints in
northeastern Asia and Alaska suggests an alternative hypothesis: that these
early colonizers did not come from Asia.
A | Pacific Coast Route |
Working from the assumption that the first
Americans originated in northeastern Asia, many archaeologists are researching
the possibility that ancient migrants traveled overland down the Pacific coast.
Some researchers have suggested these people used small, skin-covered boats,
although no direct archaeological evidence exists to support this claim. By
about 14,000 years ago the vast North American ice sheets had retreated far
enough to open the Pacific Coast route for travel—an event that occurred some
2,500 years before a habitable ice-free corridor opened in the North American
interior. A coastal migration could explain how people arrived in Monte Verde
12,500 years ago. By the time the interior route opened, the ancient Monte
Verdeans had long departed from the banks of Chinchihuapi Creek.
Finding sites occupied by coastal
migrants, however, is no easy task. Much of the late Pleistocene-age shoreline
along which migrating groups would have traveled was later submerged when the
continental ice sheets melted and their waters returned to the sea. To meet this
challenge, researchers are using sonar and taking core samples from the sea
floor to explore and probe underwater landscapes and coastlines.
Archaeological excavations have occurred
at sites on several islands off the coasts of Alaska and British Columbia. The
effort has had some initial success. A cave on Prince of Wales Island in
southeastern Alaska has yielded artifacts and human remains radiocarbon dated to
about 10,000 years ago. Bear remains from another part of the same cave are
dated to 41,000 years ago. These findings provide tantalizing hope that still
older traces of a human presence can be found in this area. Further south, on
one of the Channel Islands off the coast of California, and at several coastal
Peruvian sites, materials as much as 11,000 years old have been found. Still,
none of these sites have produced remains old enough to be those of the first
Americans.
B | North Atlantic Route |
Some archaeologists believe the first
Americans did not come from northeastern Asia, but from Europe, crossing the
North Atlantic Ocean by boat. No ancient boats have been found, but proponents
note that modern humans traveled by boat to Australia perhaps 30,000 to 40,000
years ago. Archaeological support for this theory is based mainly on
similarities observed between Clovis artifacts and those of the Solutrean Period
of prehistoric Europe. Some researchers also find support for a North Atlantic
route in several ancient human skeletons found in the Americas. These skeletons,
proponents argue, appear to have more anatomical similarities with modern
Europeans than with modern Native Americans.
Despite the claimed similarities,
Solutrean and Clovis artifacts have important differences—in form, method of
manufacture, and materials. Most obviously, Solutrean points lack fluting, and
Solutrean sites include many stone artifacts and bone tools never found in the
Americas. Most archaeologists believe the similarities in artifacts that do
exist can be explained as the result of cultural convergence. The concept of
cultural convergence suggests that different groups at different times and
places might create or use similar materials or tools in similar ways. Solutrean
and Clovis cultures are also separated by many thousands of kilometers, most of
which is ocean, and by 5,000 years. The Solutrean period ended more than 16,500
years ago, while the earliest Clovis site is only 11,500 years old.
The ancient American skeletons considered
by some archaeologists to be anatomically distinct from modern Native Americans
also fail to support a North Atlantic route. After more detailed anatomical
study, those remains proved to be far less similar to Europeans than initially
believed. Many physical anthropologists believe all ancient skeletal remains
found in the Americas are ancestral Native Americans. The fact that ancient and
modern Native Americans do not precisely resemble each other is not surprising:
many thousands of years of anatomical and evolutionary change separate them. In
addition, for several thousand years after the Americas were first settled, the
human population was small, widely scattered, and groups were relatively
isolated for long periods of time. Under these circumstances, variability in
anatomical features can emerge. Groups of ancient Americans would not
necessarily look alike, let alone resemble their descendants many thousands of
years later.
VII | LINGUISTIC AND GENETIC STUDIES OF NATIVE AMERICANS |
If the first Americans migrated from
northeast Asia, then the study of modern Native American people—descendants of
the first Americans—may hold vital clues about the number and timing of the
ancestral migrations to the Americas. Linguists and geneticists have searched
for these clues in the languages and genetic heritage of modern Native
Americans.
A | Linguistic Research |
Linguistic studies are based on the
assumption that ancient elements, or “echoes,” of an ancestral language can
still be heard in the shared words, grammar, sounds, and meanings of the diverse
languages spoken by modern Native Americans (see Native American
Languages). By searching for these elements, researchers hope to learn if all
Native American languages evolved from a single ancestral tongue. This common
ancestral tongue, if present, may be the language spoken by the earliest
Americans. If these elements are not present, however, they could indicate the
Americas were peopled at different times by groups speaking distant or unrelated
languages.
Linguists are still searching for
answers. Most linguists, however, believe the sheer number and variety of Native
American languages—of which hundreds are known—bespeaks a long period of
language diversification. University of California linguist Johanna Nichols
estimates that language diversification in the Americas began as early as 35,000
years ago.
B | Genetic Research |
Historical studies of the genetic
material of modern Native Americans appear to offer additional clues about the
earliest Americans. These studies are based on the knowledge that some types of
deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA, the chemical that encodes genetic information) are
inherited strictly from one parent or the other, but not both. Mitochondrial DNA
(mtDNA) is passed from mothers to their offspring, and Y-chromosome DNA is
passed from fathers to sons. Genetic change in these types of DNA is a result of
mutation, not recombination of the parents’ DNA. By looking at the genetic
difference in mtDNA or Y-chromosome DNA over time, researchers can determine how
closely related certain populations are and how much time has elapsed since they
were members of the same population.
Genetic studies have shown that virtually
all Native Americans share a set of four major mtDNA lineages, and at least two
such lineages on their Y chromosome. This indicates these groups are all closely
related to one another. The nearest relatives of Native Americans beyond the
Americas are the native peoples of northeastern Asia. Native Americans are
unrelated genetically to Europeans. Geneticists have variously estimated that
peoples of Asia and the Americas were part of the same population from 21,000 to
42,000 years ago.
Geneticists, like linguists, still debate
when and how many migratory bands may have trekked from Asia to the Americas.
Some scholars believe the evidence indicates a single migration. Others see
support for multiple movements of people across Beringia and back. How this is
resolved, and how the genetic heritage and languages of modern Native Americans
are linked to ancient archaeological data, such as Clovis artifacts, remain
important unsolved challenges.
VIII | TRACING AMERICAN ANCESTRY: LEGAL CHALLENGES |
One of the most obvious ways of directly
linking ancient and modern Native Americans is by examining the DNA found in
prehistoric human skeletal remains. Such remains are extremely rare, however,
and recovering DNA from ancient remains can be difficult, if it is even
preserved. In the United States the difficulty of linking ancient remains with
modern Native Americans might be a strictly scientific concern were it not for
legislation that has influenced the progress and conduct of such research.
The Native American Graves Protection and
Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), signed into law in 1990, was aimed at righting the
wrongs of earlier generations of scientists. In the past, researchers sometimes
indiscriminately collected the bones of Native Americans for study and display
in museums and universities. Native American peoples were not the only groups to
receive such treatment, but their remains and artifacts were gathered in
lopsided numbers. To many Native Americans, this was one more instance of
mistreatment at the hands of Euro-Americans. In response, NAGPRA required
institutions in possession of Native American skeletal remains and artifacts to
return them at the request of known lineal descendants.
A | Proving Lineal Descent |
In the wake of NAGPRA, thousands of
skeletons and associated artifacts were returned to Native American peoples.
Many of these objects are only a few hundred years old. In such cases, debates
over the identity of the descendants have been rare. Other cases, particularly
those involving older remains, are more difficult to resolve. Proving lineal
descent in cases of greater antiquity is no easy task. This is because
descendants of early Americans formed new groups as populations grew, and these
groups moved away to settle new lands. A group living 11,000 years ago would
almost certainly be ancestral to many modern Native American tribes, not just
one. In the future, geneticists may identify sufficiently precise genetic
markers to link DNA extracted from ancient human skeletal remains with a group
of modern tribes. But in most cases, it will be difficult to make the link to
only one tribe.
B | The Case of Kennewick Man |
In one prominent case involving ancient
skeletal remains, the debate over lineal descent ended up in a court of law. The
remains, known as Kennewick Man, were found in 1996 on the Columbia River near
Kennewick, Washington, on property belonging to the federal government. A skull
and more than 300 bones and bone fragments were found at the site, making up
among the oldest, best preserved, and most complete human remains ever found in
North America. Initial radiocarbon dating indicated the remains were between
7,000 and 9,500 years old. Five Native American tribes living in the area
submitted a joint claim under NAGPRA for the return of the remains. A group of
archaeologists and physical anthropologists then filed a lawsuit to block the
return until detailed scientific studies, including analysis of Kennewick Man’s
DNA, could be conducted.
The lawsuit sparked several years of
legal and scientific wrangling. The Native American groups felt scientific
studies were an unnecessary desecration of the remains. They believed they had
lived in the area since the beginning of human prehistory in the Americas;
therefore, Kennewick Man must be one of their ancestors. The scientists bringing
the lawsuit, however, argued that ancestry could not be ascertained without
detailed study. This research, they noted, would also add vital information to
the meager knowledge about ancient American peoples. Both sides were well
intentioned, and under the ambiguous terms of NAGPRA, both were right. NAGPRA
allows lineal descendants to be identified not just by DNA, but also by tribal
traditions and geographic proximity.
In 2004 a three-judge panel of a federal
appeals court ruled in favor of the scientists. The tribes chose not to appeal
the decision to the Supreme Court of the United States, and in July 2005
scientists began the first phase of studies on the remains. Fortunately, few
NAGPRA cases have been as contentious as that surrounding Kennewick Man. The
human remains from Prince of Wales Island, found about the same time, were
excavated and analyzed without pitting science against tribal tradition, or
archaeologists against Native Americans. Ensuring there is room for both
perspectives remains an important challenge under the framework established by
NAGPRA.
IX | THE FUTURE OF FIRST AMERICAN STUDIES |
Studies of the first Americans entered the
21st century on the cusp of change. The traditional view that the first
Americans were fast-moving Clovis big-game hunters who migrated into the North
American interior on the heels of retreating ice sheets has been undermined.
Evidence from Monte Verde demonstrates that humans arrived in the Western
Hemisphere in pre-Clovis times, and a reassessment of Clovis subsistence
suggests Clovis people were not the big-game hunting specialists imagined in the
past. As yet, no widely accepted theory has arisen to replace the older
Clovis-first theory. Researchers are proposing many new ideas. Which of these
ideas will succeed or fail remains to be seen.
A | Promising Research |
The instruments of archaeological study
continue to improve at a rapid pace. Shovels and trowels, the traditional tools
of excavation, are now being used alongside ground-penetrating radar, seismic
studies of surface features, and other techniques to find now-buried sites. A
variety of new studies are providing information about where the materials to
make ancient stone artifacts were acquired, how the artifacts were made, and how
they were used. These include studies of the geological sources of stone
artifacts, experimental work in stone fracture mechanics to better understand
how stone tools were made, and analyses of microscopic wear patterns visible on
such artifacts. A battery of techniques are now available to study the chemical
composition of bone, plant, shell, and other organic and inorganic remains,
providing archaeologists with a clearer picture of the environments to which the
first Americans adapted. New dating techniques under development should allow
archaeologists to reliably date sites more than 50,000 years old—the current
limits of radiocarbon dating. These techniques could prove useful in the event
sites of greater antiquity are eventually found in the Americas.
B | Finding Archaeological Evidence of Ancient Americans |
The time-honored process of acquiring
archaeological evidence through careful and meticulous site excavation
continues. Where the oldest preserved sites might be is not yet known. There are
obvious places to look, however, including eastern Siberia, which is still
relatively unknown to archaeologists. Other promising locations for future
research include the remnants of Beringia, coastal islands of the Pacific, the
Isthmus of Panama—through which any group headed into South America must have
passed, and perhaps places not yet imagined. Some of the most interesting
discoveries in years to come may even be made in museums, when new techniques
for analysis are applied to old collections of artifacts and human remains.
Hopefully, this can be done with the interest and cooperation of Native American
groups.
Archaeologists may never find evidence of
the very first humans to arrive in the Western Hemisphere. It is, after all, a
very big place. But ongoing research is sure to reveal much about how the first
Americans colonized a new world.
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