Monte Verde Excavation: or Clovis
Police Beat a Retreat
"After long, often bitter debate, archeologists have finally come to
a consensus that humans reached southern Chile 12,500 years ago. The
date is more than 1,000 years before the previous benchmark for
human habitation in the Americas, 11,200-year-old stone spear points
first discovered in the 1930s near Clovis, N.M.
The Chilean site,
known as Monte Verde, is on the sandy banks of a creek in wooded
hills near the Pacific Ocean. Even former skeptics have joined in
agreeing that its antiquity is now firmly established and that the
bone and stone tools and other materials found there definitely mark
the presence of a hunting-and-gathering people.
The new consensus
regarding Monte Verde, described in interviews last week and
formally announced Monday, thus represents the first major shift in
more than 60 years in the confirmed chronology of human prehistory
in what would much later be called, from the European perspective,
the New World.
For American
archeologists it is a liberating experience not unlike aviation's
breaking of the sound barrier; they have broken the Clovis barrier.
Even moving back the date by as little as 1,300 years, archeologists
said, would have profound implications on theories about when people
first reached America, presumably from northeastern Asia by way of
the Bering Strait, and how they migrated south more than 10,000
miles to occupy the length and breadth of two continents. It could
mean that early people, ancestors of the Indians, first arrived in
their new world at least 20,000 years before Columbus.
Evidence for the
pre-Clovis settlement at Monte Verde was amassed and carefully
analyzed over the last two decades by a team of American and Chilean
archeologists, led by Dr. Tom D. Dillehay of the University of
Kentucky in Lexington. Remaining doubts were erased by Dillehay's
comprehensive research report, which has been circulated among
experts and is to be published next month by the Smithsonian
Institution. And last month, a group of archeologists, including
some of Monte Verde's staunchest critics, inspected the artifacts
and visited the site, coming away thoroughly convinced.
In his report of
the site visit, Dr. Alex W. Barker, chief curator of the Dallas
Museum of Natural History, said: "While there were very strongly
voiced disagreements about different points, it rapidly became clear
that everyone was in fundamental agreement about the most important
question of all. Monte Verde is real. It's old. And it's a whole new
ball game."
The archeologists
made the site inspection under the auspices of the Dallas museum,
where their conclusions were reported Monday, and with additional
support by the National Geographic Society. The archeologists, all
specialists in the early settlement of America, included Dr. C.
Vance Haynes of the University of Arizona, Dr. James Adovasio of
Mercyhurst College in Erie, Pa., Dr. David J. Meltzer of Southern
Methodist University in Dallas, Dr. Dena Dincauze of the University
of Massachusetts at Amherst, Dr. Donald K. Grayson of the University
of Washington in Seattle and Dr. Dennis Stanford of the Smithsonian
Institution in Washington.
Dincauze, who had
expressed serious doubts about the site's antiquity, said that
Dillehay's report made "a convincing case" that the remains of huts,
fireplaces and tools showed human occupation by a pre-Clovis
culture.
"I'm convinced it's
100 percent solid," Dr. Brian M. Fagan, an anthropologist at the
University of California at Santa Barbara, said of the new
assessment of Monte Verde. "It's an extraordinary piece of
research."
Finally vindicated,
Dillehay said, "Most archeologists had always thought there was a
pre-Clovis culture out there somewhere, and I knew that if they
would only come to the site and look at the setting and see the
artifacts, they would agree that Monte Verde was pre-Clovis."
Monte Verde, on the
banks of Chinchihaupi Creek, is in the hills near the town of Puerto
Montt, 500 miles south of Santiago. Dillehay and Dr. Mario Pino of
the Southern University of Chile in Valdivia began excavations there
in 1976. They found the remains of the ancient camp, even wood and
other perishables that archeologists rarely find, remarkably well
preserved by the water-saturated peat bog that covered the site,
isolating the material from oxygen and thus decay.
As Dillehay
reconstructed the prehistoric scene in his mind, a group of 20 to 30
people occupied Monte Verde for a year or so. They lived in shelters
covered in animal hides. They gathered berries in the spring,
chestnuts in the fall and also ate potatoes, mushrooms and marsh
grasses. They hunted small game and also ancestors of the llama and
sometimes went down to the Pacific, 30 miles away, for shellfish.
They were hunters and gatherers living far from the presumed home of
their remote ancestors, in northeastern Asia.
The evidence to
support this picture is extensive. Excavations turned up wooden
planks from some of the 12 huts that once stood in the camp, and
logs with attached pieces of hide that probably insulated these
shelters. Pieces of wooden poles and stakes were still tied with
cords made of local grasses, a telling sign that ingenious humans
had been there. "That's something nature doesn't do," Barker said.
"Tie overhand knots."
Tent Stakes
at Left
Stone projectile
points found there were carefully chipped on both sides,
archeologists said. The people of Monte Verde also made digging
sticks, grinding slabs and tools of bone and tusk. Some seeds and
nuts were shifted out of the soil. A chunk of meat had managed to
survive in the bog, remains of the hunters' last kill; DNA analysis
indicates the meat was from a mastodon. The site also yielded
several human coprolites, ancient fecal material.
Nothing at Monte
Verde was more evocative of its former inhabitants than a single
footprint beside a hearth. A child had stood there by the fire
12,500 years ago and left a lasting impression in the soft clay.
Radiocarbon dating
of bone and charcoal from the fireplaces established the time of the
encampment. The date of 12,500 years ago, said Meltzer, author of
"Search for the First Americans," published in 1993 by the
Smithsonian Institution, "could fundamentally change the way we
understand the peopling of the Americas."
Child's Foot
Print at Left
The research, in
particular, shows people living as far south as Chile before it is
clear that there existed an ice-free corridor through the vast North
American glaciers by which people might have migrated south. In the
depths of the most recent ice age, two vast ice sheets converged
about 20,000 years ago over what is now Canada and the northern
United States and apparently closed off human traffic there until
sometime after 13,000 years ago. Either people migrated through a
corridor between the ice sheets and spread remarkably fast to the
southern end of America or they came by a different route, perhaps
along the western coast, by foot and sometimes on small vessels.
Otherwise they must have entered the Americas before 20,000 years
ago.
Dr. Carol Mandryk,
a Harvard University archeologist who has studied the American
paleoenvironment, said the concept of an ice-free corridor as the
migration route emerged in the 1930s, but her research shows that
even after the ice sheets began to open a path, there was not enough
vegetation there to support the large animals migrating people would
have had to depend on for food.
"It's very clear
people couldn't have used this corridor until after 13,000 years
ago," Mandryk said. "They came down the coast. I don't understand
why people see the coast as an odd way. The early people didn't have
to be interior big-game hunters, they could have been maritime
adapted people." No archeologists seriously considers the
possibility that the first Americans came by sea and landed first in
South America, a hypothesis made popular in the 1960s by the
Norwegian explorer Thor Heyerdahl. There is no evidence of people's
occupying Polynesia that long ago. All linguistic, genetic and
geological evidence points to the Bering Strait as the point of
entry, especially in the ice age, when lower sea levels created a
wide land bridge there between Siberia and Alaska.
Although several
other potential pre-Clovis sites have been reported, none has yet to
satisfy all archeologists in the way Monte Verde has just done. But
archeologists expected the verification of Monte Verde would hasten
the search for even older places of early human occupation in the
Americas.
ARCHAEOLOGY
Monte
Verde: Blessed But Not Confirmed
Science
Volume 275, Number 5304, Issue of 28 February 1997, pp. 1256-1257
©1997 by The
American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Ann Gibbons
It was the ultimate
field trip. A dozen prominent archaeologists flew to Chile in
January to see a crucial site in a long-standing dispute over when
humans first reached South America. And when the expedition
announced earlier this month that the Monte Verde site was indeed
12,500 years old--and so the oldest accepted human site in the
Americas--The New York Times compared it to "aviation's breaking of
the sound barrier." Thanks to this trip, the paper concluded, the
field had "finally come to a consensus" and had abandoned the
leading model for the peopling of the New World. That model proposes
that the first Americans were the Clovis people, big-game hunters
who came over the Bering land bridge and then swept rapidly through
the Americas about 11,500 before the present. One member of the
expedition told The Washington Post: "It totally changes how we
think of the prehistory of America." Or does it?
Peer review. A
dozen archaeologists approved Monte Verde as pre-Clovis--but the
debate isn't over yet.
ALEX BARKER/DALLAS
MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY
In a discipline as
contentious as this, one field trip is unlikely to unite the warring
factions. A few skeptics remain unconvinced: "Total consensus will
only come when the final report is out and the pattern repeats
itself at other sites," says archaeologist Tom Lynch, director of
the Brazos Valley Museum in Bryan, Texas, who doubts that humans
were at Monte Verde so long ago. And even though opinion has been
gradually moving away from the Clovis-first model for years
(Science, 19 April 1996, pp. 346 and 373), many bristle at the
implication that the discipline can be regulated by one or two key
people. The Monte Verde trip, they point out, came down to the
conversion of just two leading researchers--hardly a paradigm shift.
The trip itself was
set up to showcase 2 decades of work by the site's tireless
excavator, Thomas Dillehay of the University of Kentucky. Those who
have seen his evidence in recent years say it is remarkably thorough
and convincing. The coup de grāce came in a long-awaited 1300-page
monograph to be published in March by the Smithsonian Institution
and given to members of the expedition. This opus offers new
radiocarbon dates on wood to show that humans lived at the site at
least 12,500 years ago, and describes in detail their footprints,
stone tools, and shellfish and other materials brought in many miles
from the coast. The Monte Verde people lived in huts with wooden
frames and animal-hide roofs--unlike anything found at Clovis sites.
The monograph is "almost overkill," says archaeologist David Meltzer
of Southern Methodist University in Dallas, and it had convinced
many researchers even before the trip, including one prominent
skeptic, archaeologist Dena Dincauze of the University of
Massachusetts.
The one member of
the trip who was not persuaded beforehand was C. Vance Haynes of the
University of Arizona. And his epiphany is indeed significant,
archaeologists admit, because his stature as a leading Clovis expert
will influence nonspecialists and the undecided. He and the others
inspected the site, which has been mostly destroyed by farmers and
now blends into a sandy hillside. But new trenches allowed the group
to see the artifact-bearing layer in a "secure stratigraphic
context," topped by a layer of peat dated to 10,300 to 12,000 years
ago. "So, the artifacts had to be older than that, and I had to buy
those dates," says Haynes. With most of the group already persuaded,
"I was the heavy," he recalls. After days of intense debate, the
moment of truth came at a bar in a nearby town. "I asked if people
would agree that the site was 12,500 years old," recalls Meltzer.
Everyone did.
And even though
that date is only 1000 years older than the oldest dates for Clovis
sites, it spells trouble for models that suggest that settlers
walled an ice-free path in Canada when glaciers retreated about
12,000 years ago, making it unlikely that they reached Chile.
Alternate models suggest that the first settlers traveled by boat or
arrived before the ice sheets formed.
As
news of their acceptance of the site spread, community reaction was
decidedly mixed. Some were relieved that such a prominent skeptic as
Haynes had publicly accepted a pre-Clovis site. Others were a bit
irritated by what they saw as an overblown press response. "What's
the big fuss?" wonders University of Texas geoarchaeologist Karl
Butzer, who had considered the published date of 12,500 on Monte
Verde "uncontroversial" for some time. Clovis expert Reid Ferring of
the University of North Texas agrees: "I've been teaching my
students for years that there is sufficient evidence that Monte
Verde is pre-Clovis. You don't have to go to Chile to figure that
out." In his view, the trip was chiefly a public benediction of the
site: "I've been teasing them that they should have carried incense
burners." Jacques Cinq-Mars, an archaeologist at the Canadian
Ministry of Civilization, agrees: "There's a paradox there. You're
glad it's been done. At the same time, it's a bit irritating that
the site has now been blessed by the Inquisition." It's especially
irritating to those who disagree. Despite the publicity, insists
Lynch, "these things aren't proven overnight."
Source: http://www.unl.edu/rhames/monte_verde/MonteVerde.htm
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