Underwater archaeology confirms early humans in Americas
CBC Radio | Posted: May 20, 2016 8:00 PM | Last Updated: May 24, 2016
New finds suggest people were present 2000 years before previously thought
New excavations at a controversial archaeological site in Florida have added further confirmation that humans had settled across the Americas more than 2000 years earlier than had previously been suspected.
Dr. Michael Waters, a professor of Anthropology and Director of the Center for the Study of the First Americans, at Texas A&M University, and his colleagues re-examined the Page-Ladson site in north-western Florida, which is currently under the Aucilla river, but was a dry shoreline during the last ice age. They found stone tools and butchered mastodon bones, and carefully radio-carbon dated material around them, to confirm human activity at the site more than 14,500 years ago.
This is well before the earliest Clovis culture sites which had been thought to be the first humans in the Americas, and Dr. Waters suggests that it's likely humans were around even earlier than his new evidence would suggest.
Related Links
- Paper in Science Advances
- Texas A&M University release
- Center for the Study of the first Americans
- National Geographic story
- Smithsonian Magazine story
- Texas A&M University release
- Center for the Study of the first Americans
- National Geographic story
- Smithsonian Magazine story