WASHINGTON(AP)
Remains of meals that included seaweed are helping confirm the
date of a settlement in southern Chile that may offer the earliest
evidence of humans in the Americas.
Researchers date the seaweed found at Monte Verde to more than
14,000 years ago, 1,000 years earlier than the well-studied Clovis
culture.
And the report comes just a month after other scientists
announced they had found coprolites _ fossilized human feces _
dating to about 14,000 years ago in a cave in Oregon.
Taken together, the finds move back evidence of people in the
Americas by a millennium or more, with settlements in northern and
southern coastal areas.
The prevailing theory has been that people followed herds of
migrating animals across an ancient land bridge between Siberia and
Alaska, and then moved southward along the West coast. Proof has
been hard to come by, however. The sea was about 200 feet lower at
the time and as it rose it would have inundated the remains of
coastal settlements.
A team led by anthropologist Tom Dillehay of Vanderbilt
University reports on the new seaweed study from Monte Verde,
Chile, in Friday's edition of the journal Science.
There is a continuous mountain chain along the western side of
the Americas, Dillehay explained in a briefing, with thousands of
rivers and streams flowing down the mountains to the ocean.
This would have encouraged north-to-south migration, he
explained, with some groups choosing to turn and follow rivers
inland.
Places like the Paisley Caves in Oregon and Monte Verde in Chile
are ideal locations for such settlement, he said.
"We really don't know," he added, but genetic and
linguistic evidence is beginning to build a fairly strong case that
movement was primarily along the coast, he said.
"I tend to think that, even if they came down the
coastline, it is a slow process," Dillehay said.
"We're just not finding all of the archaeological sites,
yet."
Nine species of seaweed and marine algae were recovered from
hearths in the ancient settlement, about 500 miles south of
Santiago and about 10 miles inland.
Between 20 and 30 people appear to have lived at the site. Other
food remains found there include vegetables, nuts, shellfish, an
extinct species of llama and an elephant-like animal called a
gomphothere.
Some of the seaweed had been chewed, including two types still
used by local natives for medical purposes. Other examples were
burned, indicating cooking.
Beach stones and other materials were also found at the inland
site, Dillehay said, indicating the people at Monte Verde had a
stronger coastal tradition than was previously known.
Dillehay said Monte Verde was originally studied several decades
ago, but the seaweed remains were only just discovered in a new
analysis of recovered materials.
The materials in Oregon and Chile were radiocarbon dated at
12,500 years ago which, Dillehay said, translates to between 14,200
and 14,500 calendar years ago.
The research was funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation,
Chile's National Fund for Scientific and Technological
Development, the National Geographic Society and the University of
Chile.
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