Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) N.M. Waguespack , Alberto G. Flórez-Malagón
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) University of Wyoming
ANO 2007
TIPO Book
PERIÓDICO Evolutionary Anthropology
ISSN 1060-1538
E-ISSN 1520-6505
EDITORA Sage Publications (United States)
DOI 10.1002/evan.20124
CITAÇÕES 10
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 0241b99f6d55dd300d79461fb4345f79
MD5 2d7239133a5331b7681cb725a49cd785

Resumo

Although empirical issues surround the when, how, and who questions of New World colonization, much of current debate hinges on theoretical problems because it has become clear that our understanding of New World colonization is not resolute.1 In fact, the central issues of debate have remained essentially unchanged for the last eighty years. The now classic and probably incorrect story of New World colonization begins in Late Pleistocene Siberia, with small a population of foragers migrating across Beringia (∼13,500 calendar years before present (CYBP) (Box 1) through an ice‐free corridor and traveling through the interior of North America. High mobility and rapid population growth spurred southward expansion into increasingly distant unoccupied regions, culminating in the settlement of the Southern Cone of South America. Armed with the skills and weapons needed to maintain a megafauna‐based subsistence strategy, early colonists necessarily had the adaptive flexibility to colonize a diverse array of Pleistocene landscapes. For a time, this scenario seemed well substantiated. The earliest sites in South America were younger than their northern counterparts, fluted artifacts were found across the Americas within a brief temporal window, and projectile points capable of wounding elephant‐sized prey were commonly found in association with proboscidean remains. The Bering Land Bridge connecting Asia to Alaska and an ice‐free corridor providing passage between the Pleistocene ice masses of Canada seemed to provide a clear route of entry for Clovis colonists. However, recent archeological, paleoenvironmental, biological, and theoretical work largely questions the plausibility of these events.

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