-Caveat Lector-

(I think this ties in very well with the secret cave in the Grand Canyon. --SW :)

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Date sent:              Mon, 11 Jun 2001 21:33:02 -0500
From:                   kl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:                [CTRL] The perils of looking into American prehistory
To:                     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Send reply to:          Conspiracy Theory Research List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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http://www.nationalreview.com/weekend/anthropology/anthropology-millerprint060901.html

Roots  — Deep Ones
The perils of looking into American prehistory.
By John J. Miller, NR's national political reporter

June 9-10, 2001

One of the secrets of archaeology is that many truly great finds aren't
made by archaeologists. It was a farmer, Harold Conover, who stumbled
on a clue in the late 1980s that led to a magnificent site in Virginia
called Cactus Hill. Conover and his wife were walking on logging roads
near their home when he spotted a few Indian artifacts mixed in the
sand. He soon traced the sand back to a quarry about ten miles away.

Thanks to this detective work, a group of archaeologists led by Joseph
McAvoy started digging near that quarry in the early 1990s. They
unearthed signs of human habitation stretching back about 18,000
years — making Cactus Hill one of the two or three oldest sites in North
America. They also found evidence to support one of the most
provocative developments of our time: the growing suspicion among
physical anthropologists, archaeologists, and even geneticists that
some of the first people who settled in the New World were Europeans.

Ten years ago, hardly anybody outside crackpot circles would have
contemplated this notion.  There's a whole speculative literature of
oddball theories on groups coming to America in antiquity. Ivan Van
Sertima's They Came Before Columbus points to statues produced by
Mexico's Olmec civilization as representations of Negroid faces, and the
book remains a perennial grocery-store seller. Nancy Yaw Davis argued
last year in The Zuni Enigma that New Mexico's Zuni tribe has too much
in common with ancient Japanese culture for it to be a coincidence.

Many of these ideas persist simply because they're hard to disprove,
and it's important to remember that the whole field is afflicted with
celebrated frauds like the Kensington Runestone — a large stone slab
that came to light a century ago and claims to describe the travels of
14th-century Vikings in Minnesota.

Despite the uncertainty, it has become increasingly clear over the last
decade that the history-textbook version of ancient American settlement
no longer holds up. The first Americans, according to the standard view,
arrived about 12,000 years ago by way of a land bridge that once
connected Siberia and Alaska. Thanks to a handful of sites like Cactus
Hill, it is now beyond dispute that some people got here much earlier.

Asia remains a likely source for migrations, because of its proximity
and the fact that today's Indians indisputably have ancestors who lived
there. But Asia may not be the only source, and there's good
reason to think it wasn't.

This ought to be thrilling news for the multiculturalists. What better
project for them than the serious study of America's prehistory — a
glorious mosaic whose rich diversity is only now seeing daylight? But it
must be remembered that multiculturalism is motivated not by sincere
curiosity about the past, but by the sensitivities of modern victimology.

An important part of American Indian identity relies on the belief that, in
some fundamental way, they were here first. They are indigenous, they
are Native, and they make an important moral claim on the national
conscience for this very reason. Yet if some population came before
them — perhaps a group their own ancestors wiped out through war and
disease, in an eerily reversed foreshadowing of the contact Columbus
introduced — then a vital piece of their mythologizing suffers a serious
blow. This revised history drastically undercuts the posturing
occasioned by the 500th anniversary of Columbus's 1492 voyage.

The prime mover behind the European-migration theory is Dennis
Stanford, a jovial anthropologist who has spent nearly three decades at
the Smithsonian Institution studying Stone Age technology. A big table
dominates his office in the National Museum of Natural History, and it's
often cluttered with primitive tools borrowed from the Smithsonian's huge
collection. He is an authority on Clovis Culture, named for the town in
New Mexico where the first remnants of it were found in 1932. The
Clovis people were said to be big-game hunters who stalked
mammoths, and they left behind distinctive relics. Researchers were so
sure that they were the continent's original settlers — about
12,000 years ago — that suggesting otherwise was professional heresy.

But by the late 1980s, Stanford and a few of his colleagues, including
his former student Bruce Bradley, began to harbor serious doubts about
the Clovis theory. For starters, there were a handful of sites, such as
Pennsylvania's Meadowcroft Rockshelter, that seemed older than
Clovis. But more important, in Stanford's view, was the complete lack of
evidence that Clovis culture ever existed outside the Americas. He
spent years scouring museum collections around the world, but always
came away empty. "It was getting pretty discouraging," he says.
I
n truth, there is a Stone Age technology that looks an awful lot like
Clovis, and its existence troubled Stanford and Bradley: The culture that
produced it wasn't found in Siberia, where just about everybody would
have expected it, but at the other end of the same landmass — in
modern-day France and Spain. It's called Solutrean, and it vanished
some 20,000 years ago. Stanford and Bradley were especially intrigued
by the fact that the greatest concentration of Clovis sites occurs in the
southeastern United States: If the technology is native to the Americas,
it was probably invented in this area. If it wasn't native, then this was
probably the site to which it was imported — on the side of the North
American continent facing Europe. But a pair of insurmountable
obstacles appeared to separate the Clovis and Solutrean cultures:
several thousand years, and a large ocean.

Then came the findings at Cactus Hill. "As soon as we started to see
some of that stuff come out, we thought about the connection to
Solutrean," says Stanford.

Joseph McAvoy and his team found Clovis artifacts on the site, as well
as irrefutably older material that Stanford and Bradley think is a
developmental form of Clovis technology.

That's a groundbreaking observation. Experts in ancient technology like
to build family trees. Just as a sculptor can hack a limitless number of
objects out of a stone block, there are an infinite number of ways to chip
a hand ax or spearpoint from a rock. Over time, cultures develop
particular techniques; archaeologists can identify them and create tool
genealogies. If they find tools that look similar and were manufactured in
the same way, there's a good chance the people making them shared
cultural traits. They may have been blood relatives or trading partners,
but whatever their precise relationship, they almost certainly drew from
the same storehouse of knowledge.

Stanford is one of the world's few remaining accomplished flintknappers:
Give him the right type of rock and he can flake it into a long, bifacial,
and fluted spearpoint just like a Clovis hunter would. While other
scholars have noted the similarities between Clovis and Solutrean
technology as a mildly interesting example of cultural convergence — in
other words, a coincidence — Stanford's expertise in flintwork made him
suspect a deeper connection: "There are so many matching steps in
how they made their tools: bifacial flaking, heat treatment, similar
ceremonial items, the presence of red ocher. There must be fifty or sixty
points of comparison. It can't be chance."

And yet nobody could figure out a way to bridge the thousands of years
and miles dividing the two groups.

Then, in 1994, a team of Emory University scientists studying genetic
diversity made an unexpected discovery. They examined a specific kind
of DNA lineage known as mitochondrial DNA in ethnic groups around
the world. Their survey of American Indians found four major varieties,
which they labeled haplogroups A, B, C, and D. Each of these has
antecedents in Asia, confirming that today's Indians descend almost
entirely from Asian stock. But there's a fifth lineage, too, called
haplogroup X. It occurs in about a quarter of all Ojibway Indians, and in
lesser amounts among members of the Sioux, Navajo, and other tribes.
A version of the X haplogroup shows up in only one other place on the
planet: Europe.

"That's what pushed me over the edge," says Stanford. If the X
haplogroup had found its way to America through Siberia, it almost
certainly would have left behind a mark somewhere in Asia; but
exhaustive searching has turned up no indications of any passage. The
simplest explanation is an Atlantic crossing.

Out of Europe?

Actual human remains might help clinch the case. Unfortunately, not
many 9,000-year-old skeletons survive today. The small sample that are
known raise fascinating possibilities. The much-disputed Kennewick
Man, for instance, is said to have Caucasoid features, as opposed to
the Mongoloid ones of present-day Indians. (This isn't to say he was
"white"  — nobody knows the color of his skin.) Some researchers have
suggested his morphology most closely resembles the Ainu, an
indigenous Japanese population. But the prospect of early migrations
from places other than Asia can't be dismissed. One skull found in
Brazil shares more similarities with Australian Aborigines than with any
other group. "The evidence is mounting that the earliest North
Americans were a distinct people, or perhaps several distinct peoples,
who cannot easily be linked to modern American Indians," writes James
C. Chatters — the forensic anthropologist who recovered Kennewick
Man — in his just-published book, Ancient Encounters.

How might Europeans have made it to the Americas so long ago? The
challenge appears immense, but there is a tendency to underestimate
the cleverness of ancient peoples  — a tendency that grows over time,
perhaps, as we depend more on sophisticated technology and begin to
believe that only a half-wit would sail beyond sight of the coast without
hooking up to a GPS satellite. But boats and navigation aren't recent
inventions; human beings reached Australia at least 40,000 years ago,
and getting there would have required — at least — a trip of about 80
miles on the high seas, from New Guinea. That's much shorter than
traversing the Atlantic, to be sure, but the important point is that it
represents a willingness and ability among ancient people to leave the
relative safety of coastal waterways.

A migration out of Europe seems distinctly possible if we consider a
number of factors that probably would have given ancient travelers a
boost. During the last ice age, the sea levels were lower; today's coasts
were inland, and the distance from Western Europe to the Grand Banks
(which then formed the easternmost part of North America) would have
been about 1,400 miles — far, but much closer than it is today. In
addition, an ice shelf extending south from the Arctic would have
presented a clear route. Seals, penguins, and fish would have offered
nourishment along the way. The prevailing ocean current, too, would
have swept these early people in the right direction. So the journey
wouldn't have required the prehistoric equivalent of the Apollo space
program. may have been a few guys on an ice floe," says Stanford.

Discovering an 18,000-year-old Irish coracle off the New Jersey shore
would settle a lot of questions, but ancient boats were made of
perishable materials. Tools and bones last longer, and that's what
makes the Cactus Hill artifacts and the Kennewick remains so
important. Prehistory isn't called prehistory for nothing:  It's a challenge
to study, because the people who made it left only scant traces of
themselves. Even if a European migration really did happen, the
evidence proving it conclusively may not exist today. What evidence
does exist seems to turn up by happenstance, such as when a farmer
takes a stroll down a logging road. In the case of Kennewick Man, a pair
of boozed-up college students waded into the Columbia River to avoid
buying $11 tickets for a boating exhibition, and then spotted a skull
sticking out of the mud. These important discoveries were essentially
accidents.

The truth may be out there, but some people would prefer to keep it
hidden. Kennewick Man, for instance, is currently locked up in Seattle's
Burke Museum, where nobody is allowed to study him. Last
September, interior secretary Bruce Babbitt announced his intention to
give the priceless remains to modern-day Indian tribes that intended to
bury the bones without allowing scientists a look. Several researchers
(including Stanford) sued, and a judge stopped the handover. Lawyers
will argue the case on June 19, and the fate of Kennewick Man —
perhaps the most important human skeleton ever found in the Western
Hemisphere — remains uncertain.

This case is hardly an exception. Thanks to the Native American Graves
Protection and Repatriation Act of 1990, federally recognized tribes have
the right to petition for human remains. The idea was to help them
protect their ancestors from grave robbers — but in practice the law has
become a tool for tribal activists to prevent the study of ancient people.

The Friends of America's Past, an organization based in Portland, Ore.,
counts five other sets of bones — rough contemporaries of Kennewick
Man — that have been lost to science under this or similar laws, and
another six "in jeopardy" of the same fate. Most of these remains are
said to share the vaguely "Caucasoid" traits seen on Kennewick Man —
but again, research opportunities have been restricted.

Stanford and Bradley are completing a manuscript on the Clovis-
Solutrean connection, which the University of California Press expects
to publish next year. It's impossible to say whether the next generation
of scholars will come to look at their work as a turning point in our
understanding of prehistory, or a less-than-completely-convincing
argument that makes creative use of meager material. What seems
increasingly clear, however, is that the old story of a simple land
migration from Siberia 12,000 years ago won't survive. The question of
what will replace it should be a matter of concern to all of us, because
the first Americans represent the heritage of all Americans. No single
person or group owns the past; we all do, collectively.

And it is only through a spirit of scientific inquiry that we may learn the
answer to that fascinating question: How did the New World come to
have such people in it?

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