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Science

Clovis people not 1st to arrive in North America

Spearheads and DNA found at the Paisley Caves in Oregon suggest that a separate group of people using different hunting tools arrived in North America several hundred years prior to the Clovis culture.

Spearheads, DNA found in Oregon's Paisley Caves suggest continent colonized by multiple cultures

A Western Stemmed spear point found at the Paisley Caves in Oregon. Archeologists from the University of Oregon, Oregon State University and the University of Copenhagen found spearheads at the caves dating from 12,960 to 13,230 years ago, and human DNA going back even further. (Cheng Lily Li)

Spearheads and DNA found at the Paisley Caves in Oregon suggest that a separate group of people using different hunting tools arrived in North America several hundred years prior to the Clovis,long thought to be the first to migrate to North America from Asia.

Archeologistsat the University of Oregon, Oregon State University and the University of Copenhagen used radiocarbon dating and DNA analysis to examine fossilized excrement,obsidian projectile points and thestratified sedimentinside a series of caves locatedin the Summer Lake basin in south-central Oregon.

The caves are part of a unique archeological site thatis part of the Great Basin watershed and thanks to its arid climate has been able to preserve some of the oldest human remains in the Western Hemisphere.

The researchers concluded that the human DNA they found in thePaisley Caves excrement was as old as 14,000 years, and the spear points dated from about 13,230 to 12,960 years ago and did not resemble the spearheads used by the Clovis people, who are believed to have settled in North America between 13,400 and 12,800years ago.

The find suggests North America was colonized by multiple cultures, some of whom arrived possibly earlier than the Clovis.

"Our investigations constitute the final blow to the Clovis First theory," said Eske Willerslev of the University of Copenhagen's Centre for GeoGenetics, which did the DNA analysis, in a news release. "Culturally, biologically and chronologically, the theory is no longer viable.

"The dissimilar stone artifacts, as well as the DNA-profiling of the human excrement, show that humans were present before Clovis and that another culture in North America was at least as old as the Clovis culture itself."

Clovis First theory dominated since 1930s

An 11,000-year-old Clovis spear point, with the characteristic notch at its base that distinguishes it from the Western Stemmed spearhead. (Virginia Deptartment of Historic Resources/Wikimedia Commons)

TheClovis First theory of how North America was settled proposes that a group of Paleo-Indian people, dubbed Clovis after the New Mexico town where the first evidence of them was found,were the first humans to settle in North America. They are believed to have arrivedfrom Asia via a land bridge over the Bering Strait at the end of the last Ice Age and then spreadthroughout the continent.

The theory has been dominant since a number of spear points thought to be the first evidence of humans' arrival in North America were discovered in 1932 near the village of Clovis.

The Clovismethod of making spear points out of flakes of obsidian rockhas been thought to be the "mother technology" for all later technologies that emerged in North America. The spearheads are fluted and have a unique notch at the base where a large flake of stone has been removed.

But the U.S. and Danisharcheologists working at the Paisley Caves found evidence of so-called Western Stemmed spearheads at the site. These indicateda different technology from Clovis spears, one that produces spear points that are narrower and differ in the way they are attached to the base of the projectile.

"Stemming means that there is a long portion of the artifact that is not a part of the blade, and that goes down into the wood of the dart shaft, and then you lash it up and hope that it doesn't split when you cast it into the animal," said Dennis Jenkins of the University of Oregon, the lead author of apaperon the find, which was published Thursday inthe journal Science.

'The fact that Western Stemmed point-makers fully overlap, or even pre-date, Clovis point-makers likely means that Clovis peoples were not the sole founding population of the Americas.' Loren Davis, Oregon State University

"That technology or shape is found in Siberia and Asia, and it's there much earlier than we have dated it here in the United States.

"What we see here [in the U.S.] is Western points that are regional derivatives of that form."

The spear points Jenkins and his team foundare the earliest examples of Western Stemmed points found in the U.S. to date, Jenkins said Thursday in an interview with CBCNews.ca.

"These two approaches to making projectile points were really quite different," said study co-author Loren Davis of Oregon State in a news release. "And the fact that Western Stemmed point-makers fully overlap, or even pre-date, Clovis point-makers likely means that Clovis peoples were not the sole founding population of the Americas."

Link to ancient animals missing

To date, there has been doubt that enough evidence exists that a separate group of hunter-gathererslived in North America at the same time as or earlier than the Clovis.

"The point about Clovis First has been: if there is somebody else on the landscape, why haven't we found them?" said Jenkins. "For 70 years or more, we have been capable of finding Clovis points and associating them with mastodons and mammoths and other extinctanimals, but we haven't been able to do the same thing with any other projectile points."

Dennis Jenkins, a University of Oregon archeologist, with some of the artifacts he and his team found at the Paisley Caves in 2008. That year, Jenkins and his colleagues uncovered evidence of human DNA dating to 14,300 years ago. (Jim Barlow)

While the current find doesn't definitively demonstrate that the Western Stemmed spears were being used to hunt ancient animals, since they weren't found in direct proximity to animal bones, it dates the spears to a period that overlaps with such animals and suggests the presence of a people pre-dating Clovis and who had already been the subject ofanearlier findmade by Jenkins and Willerslev.

In 2008, the twomanaged to date a series of coprolites (fossilized excrement)found at the Paisley Caves to 14,340 years ago, and to show through DNA analysis that they came from people who originated in Asia and were likely predecessors of modern indigenous North Americans.

The new discovery provides further evidence of the presence of people in that pre-Clovis period, andalthough it does not provide DNA evidence that these people were genetically different from the Clovis, in Jenkins's view,it does support the idea that there were two separate migrations to North America one that came by way of a Pacific coastal route and another that came from the north via an ice-free corridor in the middle of the continent.

"What it does is raise the spectre further that glaciers blocked the way through the middle portion of the northern part of the continent inother words,Canadawas under ice," Jenkins said.

"And even if the ice-free corridor was open, we are not certain that it was a pleasant or habitable environment to be, so there's a lot of questions about the feasibility of bringing somebody through the middle portionof the continent and into the northern plains of the United States through Canada.

"Western Stemmed points are so common in the westernUnited Statesand much less common in the easternUnited States, and Clovis is just exactly the opposite ... so it really looks like there is this east-west dichotomy."

DNA not contaminated, researchers say

What makes the current results stronger than past data is that previous DNA-containing excrementfound at the Paisley Caveswasthoughtto belikely contaminated by DNA from later periods that seeped into the soil by way of waterandurinefrom humans and animals.

A coprolite, or fossilized human excrement, that dates back to approximately 14,000 years ago. (Cheng Lily Li)

The researchers behind the current study say there is no chance of that in this case.

They say they have conducted a detailed microscopic analysis of the soil structure and sediment that accumulate in the caves and ruled out any contamination.

The sediment containslayers and layersof dust, twigs, sand, soil, bones and otherplant and animal matter, including chunks of fossilized excrement fromdifferent periods.

To establish how old the DNA is, the archeologistshad toextract a fibre of hair,bone or fibrous plant material that survived the digestive processand apply radiocarbon dating methods tothat since the genetic material itself cannot be carbon dated.

When testing the carbon in thefossilized exrementat the Paisley Caves, Jenkins and his colleagues found that in most cases,it was older than the materials it was found in, indicating it came from the surrounding environmentand not from later material that filtered down into the lower soil.

"We've completed more than 141 new radiocarbon measurements on materials ranging from coprolites to wood and plant artifacts, fossil plants and mummified animals, to unique, water-soluble chemical fractions from sediments and the coprolites themselves," said Thomas Stafford of the Centre for GeoGenetics in the news release.

"We have usedcarbon-14 dating to physically and temporally dissect the Paisley Caves strata at the millimetrelevel.

"At present, we see no evidence that geologically younger, water-borne molecules DNA in particular have moved downward and contaminated deeper, older coprolites."

Technology only hints at culture

Jenkins is cautious to point out that he and his colleagues were unable to link the Western Stemmed spears directly tospecific genetic or cultural differences and that, ultimately, what spear pointscan tell us about a people is limited.

"What we have are reallytechno-cultures, if you will," he said. "We look at the projectile points, and we call that a culture, but in reality, it's not. It doesn't speak language; it doesn't have genetics. We don't know anything about its social organization or very little.

"It's not really a culture; it's a technology or a tradition that you look at and then try to extrapolate from there what the culture might have been like."

It's likely that hunter-gathererswould have passed down onespecific method of spear-making from father to son, Jenkins said, and while the two spearhead typesdefinitely indicate different approaches to crafting tools, it's less clear whether these approaches were applied by distinct groups.

It's entirely possible the different types of spearheads represent an evolution of tools ora contemporaneous use of tools for different purposes, he said although there were no Clovis points found at the site Jenkins's team examined.

"It could be the same people using different tools at the same time," he said. "You could have different groups that emphasize different subsistence patterns."