-Caveat Lector-

LA TIMES
July 30, 2001

Ancient Land-Crossings Studied

By PAUL RECER, AP Science Writer

WASHINGTON -- The first people to cross a land bridge from Asia and settle in the 
Americas may have been
descendants of an ancient group who once lived in Japan, according to a new study.

Researchers examining and measuring the bone structure of nearly 10,000 ancient human 
skulls collected from
around the world say the first Americans were most closely related to the Jomon, a 
prehistoric people who
lived in Japan thousands of years ago, and to a later group, the Ainu.

C. Loring Brace of the Museum of Anthropology at the University of Michigan said the 
skull measurements and
other evidence suggest the members of the Jomon-Ainu group crossed what is now the 
Bering Straits and migrated
throughout the Americas, from Alaska to the tip of South America.

"These were not the people who now live in Japan," said Brace, lead author of a study 
appearing Tuesday in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. "Those people migrated to Japan later 
from Asia, but you can
still find traces of the Jomon among the Japanese."

Brace said the Jomon had some characteristics of Europeans, along with Asian 
influences.

Those first migrants reached the Americas about 15,000 years ago, he said, and within 
about 1,000 years there
were people living near the tip of South America.

At the time of the first migration, ice covered much of the northern world, causing 
the worldwide sea level to
drop by hundreds of feet. The Bering Strait, which is not much deeper than 60 feet in 
most places, was not
there. Instead, there was a dry land bridge from Alaska to Siberia.

Brace said characteristics of the first migrants are now clearly seen in many of the 
American Indian tribes,
including the Blackfoot, Sioux and Cherokee.

A second migration came some 3,000 to 4,000 years ago, Brace said, but these people 
were a mix of Chinese,
Southeast Asian and Mongolian. They probably came by boat, he said, paddling across 
the Bering Strait, which
had filled with water after the massive northern ice sheet melted.

Brace said people from this later migration became the Eskimo and Aleut, living in the 
far north. At least
some migrated south and are represented today by the Navajo, he said.

The conclusions are based on a detailed analysis and measurement of 21 bone 
characteristics in ancient skulls
collected by museums and researchers all over the world, Brace said. A computer 
analysis of the thousands of
measurements reveals a pattern of similarity that enables the researchers to connect 
peoples from different
parts of the world.

Co-authors of the study include scientists from China and Mongolia.

There is strong evidence to suggest that the Jomon peoples in Japan were skilled boat 
builders, Brace said. He
said they probably used boats to move down the west coast of the Americas, settling 
wherever game and food
plants were plentiful.

"These were hunters and gatherers," he said. "This was thousands of years before 
agriculture. But they had
boat technology."

Evidence of this is the birchbark canoe, Brace said. Ancient examples of that sturdy 
craft have been found in
Japan and closely resembled the canoe later commonly used by natives in the Americas, 
he said.

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