Humans lived in America 30,000 years ago, far earlier than thought: study

The research also implicated humans in the extinctions of many large Ice Age mammals such as mammoths and camels.

Updated - July 23, 2020 07:50 am IST

Published - July 23, 2020 06:41 am IST - WASHINGTON

The team carefully sampling the different cultural layers in the cave.

The team carefully sampling the different cultural layers in the cave.

Stone tools unearthed in a cave in central Mexico and other evidence from 42 far-flung archeological sites indicate people arrived in North America earlier than previously known, upwards of 30,000 years ago.

Scientists said on Wednesday they had found 1,930 limestone tools, including small flakes and fine blades that may have been used for cutting meat and small points that may have been used as spear tips, indicating human presence at the Chiquihuite Cave in a mountainous region of Mexico's Zacatecas state.

 

The tools spanned from 31,000 to 12,500 years old, said archaeologist Ciprian Ardelean of Universidad Autūnoma de Zacatecas in Mexico, lead author of one of two studies published in the journal Nature . The site was occupied periodically for millennia by nomadic hunter-gatherers.

In the second study, evidence from 42 sites around North America and the location of a land bridge that connected Siberia to Alaska during the last Ice Age indicated human presence dating to at least a time called the Last Glacial Maximum, when ice sheets blanketed much of the continent, about 26,000 to 19,000 years ago and immediately thereafter.

The research also implicated humans in the extinctions of many large Ice Age mammals such as mammoths and camels.

Our species first appeared about 3,00,000 years ago in Africa, later spreading worldwide. The new findings contradict the conventional view that the first people arrived in the Americas around 13,000 years ago, crossing the land bridge, and were associated with the “Clovis culture,” known for distinctive stone tools.

The team entering the Chiquihuite Cave

The team entering the Chiquihuite Cave

The findings suggest low numbers of people entered the continent earlier than previously understood — some perhaps by boat along a Pacific coastal route rather than crossing the land bridge — and some died out without leaving descendants.

Archaeological scientist Lorena Becerra-Valdivia of the University of Oxford in England and the University of New South Wales in Australia said the continent's populations then expanded significantly beginning around 14,700 years ago. “The peopling of America was a complicated, complex and diverse process,” Ardelean said. “These are paradigm-shifting results that shape our understanding of the initial dispersal of modern humans into the Americas.”

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