Primitive Archer
Main Discussion Area => Around the Campfire => Topic started by: Zuma on May 16, 2014, 07:13:15 pm
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I am sort of a Clovis first person. At least the overwhelming evidence and DNA that
points to a migration into the Americas from Siberia.
I am relieved to see that this find is another nail in the coffin of Across Atlantic Ice
and Solutrean nonsense.
What do you'll think?
Ancient Skeleton Of Teenage Girl, 'Naia,' Sheds Light On First Americans
Paste this in your browser. Be nice if someone could make it a link.
Zuma
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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/05/16/ancient-skeleton-teenage-girl-naia_n_5332400.html
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Thank you Don.
I thought the link would have to be green. LOl
Yours works well.
Zuma
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What about the dude that thinks they came on boats??? I'd never heard that! How much later were pacific islanders than native Americans? It seems do-able right?
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What about the dude that thinks they came on boats??? I'd never heard that! How much later were pacific islanders than native Americans? It seems do-able right?
Hi Tim, how ya doin?
The maritime theories can certainly hold some possibilities but they are by and
far not substantiated for many reasons. Those folks like to push the dates back
to well before the Clovis era. No DNA to support any of that.
Most dates for eastern Pacific Islanders that I am aware of, are way later than even the Archaic period. Just think about the fact that even later boats found in the Americas are just dugouts or bark canoes?
Zuma
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I read that article, Don, pretty cool. It was close to the same time period as Paleo points found in Florida.
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I buy the Solutrean Theory,(I Am Here Right Now), as I have been on both sides of the Atlantic doing research, and the overwhelming evidence is that Clovis originated in Europe and made its way to the Atlantic Coast..
Riddle me this Batman....If Clovis came from Siberia, why are the majority of Clovis sites East of the Mississippi????? Very Few West Of it...Just Saying.....
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Why would the volume of sites on one side of the continent indicate that they must have arrived on that side?
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Maybe they ended up with their stash on the East coast after they had killed and driven every large animal from the NW in that direction and didn't want to swim? :-\
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Seems just as probable that they came over on the Northwest side and worked their way down and across fairly quickly and then went East and just spent more time there resulting in a higher number of sites.
It certainly seems more feasible that if there is a pretty wide, dry land bridge populated by game that people wouldn't overly complicate the journey by taking a different route.
Considering all the identical or virtually identical animals found on either continent it seems most likely that people came here exactly the same way.
Nobody is talking about Wolves, Elk, and Moose coming over on boats.
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It's always fun to dream and guess about things, especially if they can't be proven !!
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Wow, Great replies.
I think that east of the Mississippi is just a better place to live.
Mostly because of trees and vegetation. Milder climate.
My very own theory is that the original folks coming from the west
were initially Western Stemmed folks. Many of these finds in the Alaskan
Arctic and the far west are at least contemporary with Clovis if not just a smidgen ahead. Elephants were not to present in these territories (Great Basin) etc.
Mammoths were plentiful in southern Arizona and the Great Plains.
They were easy kills as the creatures had never encountered humans before.
Unlike the rest of the entire world. I think the Clovis point was invented just to kill these beasts. The flutes slowly disappear with the Mega Fauna.
I think a lot of folks, no matter how they look at this fascinating time of pre history.
They are looking.
Zuma
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I bought the book Across Atlantic Ice and some theorys are very good. Contients were bigger and oceans were alot smaller. Dr. Gramly has started another dig at the Sugar Loaf Mt. site which has been tied up in legality since I believe 1985. Last yrs finds are truly outstanding and he believes this will be the largest clovis site ever, Personally I think they came both from east and west. Bob
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I watched a show on TV recently about a site along the Savannah River that supposedly is one of the largest Clovis sites in the US. I also believe man came to the Americas from the Northwest across the Bering Straights and the Northeast along the Northern Atlantic shelf where the marine mammals hung out.
12,000 to 15,000 years ago is when the last ice age began to reverse, supposedly when man first came to the Americas and about the time of the development of the bow and arrow. Busy times! ;D
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I may be wrong but I think Gault (Texas) tops Topper, the one on the Savannah.
The ice in the north Atlantic was 3,000 miles of desolation from France to New York City and up to the North Pole
Not even a volcanic mountain island top. The animal zones would have only extended a couple hundred miles from either shore. An impossible trek in my opinion. Even with the clothing and technology of today.
Certainly not enough survivors to establish a continent's worth of people very quickly.
I don't know the vintage of the bow in Europe or Asia, but it shows up in the Americas about 1,500 years ago from what I have read?
Gramley is in this link--
East Wenatchee Clovis Site - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
I have been taken with some early Triangles from New England.
Zuma
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Lived around the East Wenatchee site. Not quite sure that it is legit. Has been much debate about it esp since they paved it over and have not allowed further digging around it. Why hide the find of the era and not provide access to give Scientist a chance to find further proof it was legit????
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The Sugar Loaf site is on the Connecuitt River in Mass. The college put 8 feet of sand over thier property to perserve it , The otherside of property was road right of way and the Clovis points that were found last summer are truly amazing, They believe they found the actual site of manufacturing of said points, Clovis base and hafting sides were not ground so probably were not ever attached to darts, More work is planned to be done on this site this yr if all the legality are over. Bob
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Great Site. Known as King Phillip's throne. Grew up just a few miles from there and found points and campsites all over our fields. National Geographic did a 2 year study of our property and found many Clovis and later artifacts. I will dig out the Clovis points I found and post them in a later post. Used to turn up at least 10-12 points a year from our cornfield....
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Mohawk.
When Wenatchee was new with an 8 inch crystal Clovis points on the cover of
Nat Geo the world couldn't get enough. I read somewhere that those points (cashe) disappeared. ?? Yeah, something unusual there.
I hope you can post your finds. That would be cool
Bob, Sugarloaf has ties to the same archaeologist also.
Along with two other New England sites.
These digs will be worth keeping an eye on.