-Caveat Lector-

4-12-1999, RJ wrote:

 First American 'from Polynesia'

 London Times, 4-12-99

 Los Angeles:  Thigh bones found on a California island
 could be from North America's oldest skeleton, according to
 scientists challenging American Indians' most cherished
 beliefs about the continent's population (Giles Whittell
 writes).  The bones, stored since being found in 1959, are
 now said to be from a woman who died about 13,000 years ago
 - 1,400 years earlier than first told.  The difference is
 crucial, suggesting the New World's first human beings may
 have come not by foot from Siberia, but by boat, possibly
 from Polynesia.

 "She may be the earliest inhabitant we have discovered,"
 John Johnson of Santa Barbara Museum said after a paper was
 presented on Arlington Springs Woman, outlining retesting
 using new DNA and radiocarbon dating methods.  If the date
 is correct, she would have lived when the mainland was
 roamed by woolly mammoths and covered largely by glaciers.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 from:  http://www.latimes.com/HOME/NEWS/STATE/t000032648.html

 Los Angeles Times
 Sunday, April 11, 1999

 Channel Island Woman's Bones May Rewrite History

 By GARY POLAKOVIC, Times Staff Writer

 In a discovery that sheds new light on the human conquest of
 the New World, a team of scientists says that bones from an
 ancient woman who lived on the Channel Islands off Ventura
 County could be the oldest human remains ever found in North
 America.

 The extraordinary discovery provides important clues to a
 critical yet mysterious period in human history -- the end
 of the last major ice age -- when nomadic people began
 populating the Americas but left little evidence about who
 they were or where they came from.

 The woman's bones, subjected to recent reexamination after
 spending the better part of four decades in storage, join a
 growing body of ancient skeletal remains that challenges
 traditional theories that the first visitors came here from
 northern Asia by way of a land bridge to Alaska.  The new
 evidence suggests that the first settlers could have been
 Polynesians or southern Asians who arrived by boat.  Some of
 the recent remains have features more typical of Europeans,
 scientists say.

 "Bottom line is she may be the earliest inhabitant of North
 America we have discovered.  It's a find of national
 significance," said John R. Johnson, curator of anthropology
 at the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, part of the
 team involved in the research.

 The skeletal remains consist of two thigh bones scooped from
 a gully at Arlington Canyon on Santa Rosa Island 40 years
 ago.  They were tested in the 1960s and kept in their
 original soil before being encased in plaster and stored in
 the basement of the Santa Barbara museum.  Researchers at
 the museum and Channel Islands National Park recently
 decided to subject the bones to sophisticated DNA and
 radiocarbon testing methods that were not available when the
 bones were discovered.

 The tests were performed by Stafford Research Laboratories
 in Boulder, Colo., one of the nation's preeminent carbon
 dating labs.  The results showed that the bones are probably
 13,000 years old, 1,400 years older than previously thought.
 That would make the so-called Arlington Springs woman
 slightly older than the oldest known human skeletons in
 North America, which came from Montana, Idaho and Texas,
 scientists say.

 Other members of the research team included scientists from
 the University of California, Lawrence Livermore National
 Radiocarbon Laboratory, and the National Park Service.
 Results of the investigation have not yet been submitted to
 peers for critical review and have not been published in
 scientific journals.  But a paper describing the experiment
 presented March 30 at the fifth California Islands Symposium
 at the Santa Barbara museum has fueled excitement among
 leading scholars in the field.

 Two sets of tests were performed on the bones and have
 produced differing estimates of their age.  The first set
 was performed by the Stafford lab and R. Ervin Taylor,
 chairman of the anthropology department at UC Riverside,
 another respected expert in the carbon dating of skeletons.
 Those tests produced an age of 11,000 years.  Thomas W.
 Stafford, a research geochemist who runs the Stafford lab,
 performed a second set of tests on another piece of leg bone
 that was in better condition.  That test isolated a protein
 common to bones and analyzed the remaining amino acids,
 which indicated an age of about 13,000 years.  Additional
 tests on a lump of charcoal and a mouse jawbone, found
 beside the leg bones in the same stratum of soil, confirmed
 that age, Stafford said.

 Taylor said he hopes to double-check the older date by
 testing the same portion of femur that Stafford used.  But
 he vouched for the other man's expertise.  "He has a very
 good track record, he has scientific credibility and he does
 a lot of work on bones from the New World.  You take his
 data seriously," Taylor said.

 Either way, the bones from Santa Rosa Island join an
 exclusive group of skeletons from the very earliest people
 to arrive in the Western Hemisphere.  In those days, the
 colonizers would have seen continent-sized glaciers and
 woolly mammoths.  The sea level was 360 feet lower than it
 is today.  The northern Channel Islands near Ventura and
 Santa Barbara counties were joined in a contiguous land mass
 that scientists refer to as Santa Rosae.

 The bones were found in a canyon on the island that ancient
 peoples have inhabited on and off for thousands of years.
 A short distance from the site is Daisy Cave on San Miguel
 Island, where a handful of flints, stone chips and charcoal
 -- some nearly as old as the woman's bones -- have been
 found.  It is possible she may have lived there and walked
 across a canyon, now underwater, to the current Santa Rosa
 Island where she died, said Don Morris, archeologist for
 Channel Islands National Park.

 "It's pretty incredible.  Arlington woman presses right back
 into this time of the early migration of the New World.  She
 could be the oldest skeleton in North America," Stafford
 said.

 The bones found on the island could help rewrite a key
 chapter of human history.  Until a couple of years ago, most
 scientists thought the earliest people to reach the New
 World arrived about 11,500 years ago, probably by walking
 across a land bridge where the Bering Strait now separates
 Alaska from Siberia.  History books describe them and their
 descendants as the Clovis peoples, big-game hunters who left
 stylized spear points that enabled archeologists to track
 their migration south through parting glaciers along the
 Rocky Mountains into the present-day United States and Latin
 America.

 But recent discoveries point to an earlier colonization of
 the Western Hemisphere.  A campsite known as Monte Verde in
 southern Chile was occupied 12,500 years ago.  At the Cactus
 Hill site in Virginia, scientists found stone tools and
 charcoal that may date back 15,500 years, said archeologist
 Rob Bonnichsen, director of the Center for the Study of
 First Americans at Oregon State University in Corvallis.

 "What we are starting to realize is the earliest people in
 the New World came in thousands of years earlier in time.
 The peopling of the Americas is looking much more
 complicated," said Douglas W. Owsley, head of the physical
 anthropology department at the Smithsonian Institution's
 National Museum of Natural History.

 "We used to feel very confident that Clovis was the first
 peoples, but other new finds coming to light are documenting
 that there were people in the Americas before Clovis.  The
 Americas were colonized in more than one event," said D.
 Gentry Steele, anthropologist at Texas A & M University.

 These discoveries challenge the theory that the first
 migrants slogged over land through passages in receding
 glaciers.  Travel along that route would have been slow and
 perilous and does not account for widespread distribution of
 humans at such an early date, the experts said.

 Scientists increasingly postulate that the original
 colonizers of the New World might have taken a coastal
 route.  Where glaciers stopped at the water's edge,
 protein-rich seafood was abundant and the visitors could
 travel by boats.  The bones from the island woman bolster
 that hypothesis, Bonnichsen said.

 "The broad significance is it puts humans in a maritime
 setting in western North America 13,000 years ago.  It
 demonstrates the use of boats," Bonnichsen said.  "This
 Arlington Springs find is really a significant find in terms
 of providing support for that larger theoretical idea."

 The new discovery is likely to be controversial in part
 because many scientists say that the old skeletons found in
 the past few years around the Western United States do not
 resemble modern Native Americans.  Detailed examinations of
 the skulls reveal slender faces, narrower brain cavities,
 high foreheads and slightly protruding chins that are more
 typical of Caucasoid peoples.

 Some of them bear striking resemblance to a very ancient
 race called the Ainu, a maritime people who were forerunners
 of Polynesians and long ago occupied Japan and China, Owsley
 said.

 In contrast, Native American people and their ancestors have
 features common to Eskimos and people of northern Asia,
 including round, flatter faces and pronounced cheekbones,
 Owsley said.

 Many Native American groups strongly object to the theory
 that others got here first.  In some cases, including one
 major one in the Northwest, tribes have successfully invoked
 the 1990 Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation
 Act to force researchers to return old skeletons for
 reburial before they can be tested.

 Paul Varela, executive director of the Chumash Interpretive
 Center in Thousand Oaks, said oral traditions passed down
 through generations of Central Coast Indians confirm that
 they were the first inhabitants of California.

 "If you ask a Chumash person, they will tell you they have
 been here forever.  We've always been here," Varela said.

 In part to resolve such questions, UC Davis anthropologist
 David Glenn Smith said he hopes to begin DNA testing by
 summer on bones from 18 very old North American skeletons,
 including the Arlington Springs woman.  The testing would go
 far in determining the ancestry and closest living relatives
 of America's first inhabitants.

 "This is the foggiest piece of time.  We're trying to answer
 that question:  Who got here first?" Stafford said.

                            * * *
 Early American

 Scientists are finding an increasing number of ancient human
 skeletons in the Western Hemisphere that suggest the first
 migrants arrived much earlier than previously thought.  Here
 are some sites where the oldest discoveries have been made:

 (*) Ages are in radiocarbon years, a scientific measurement
 of the rate of radioactive decay that does not correspond to
 a calendar year.

 Source:  UC Riverside, Stafford Research Laboratories Inc.,
 Texas A & M University

 Site: Santa Rosa Island, California
       Age of Bones*: 10,960

 Site: Anzick, Montana
       Age of Bones*: 10,240-10,940

 Site: Buhl, Idaho
       Age of Bones*: 10,675

 Site: Mostin, California
       Age of Bones*: 10,470

 Site: Arroyo Frias River, Argentina
       Age of Bones*: 10,300

 Site: Horn Shelter and Wilson-Leonard, Texas
       Age of Bones*: 10,000

 Site: On-Your-Knees Cave, Prince of Wales Island, Alaska
       Age of Bones*: 9,730

 Site: Spirit Cave, Nevada
       Age of Bones*: 9,350-9,460

 Site: Wizard Beach, Pyramid Lake, Nevada
       Age of Bones*: 9,110-9,515

 Site: La Brea Tar Pits, Los Angeles
       Age of Bones*: 9,000

 Site: Kennewick, Washington state
       Age of Bones*: 8,410



 Copyright 1999 Los Angeles Times.  All Rights Reserved




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