Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Joseph F. Powell , D.G. Steele , Fredric Jameson
ANO 1992
TIPO Book
CITAÇÕES 16
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 a7b2d2c9a2ce1e86a24809bb68f14cee
MD5 823c06c9ef6a9c7d1dd4f7fa1ca80fcf

Resumo

The majority of scholars studying the human colonization of the New World agree that the first Americans, traditionally identifed as Paleoindians, entered near the end of the Pleistocene via the Bering land bridge from northeast Asia. But this is where agreement ends. Questions about the number and timing of migrations, the physical appearance of the colonists, and the manner in which they lived have been examined since the turn of the century1–7 and still engender lively debate.8–16 Curiously lacking from the growing body of data on the peopling of the Americas is evidence from the physical remains of the first Americans. We summarize research on the earliest human remains from North America and discuss how these remains shed new light on these unanswered questions.

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