4.4 Article

From Asia to the Americas by boat? Paleogeography, paleoecology, and stemmed points of the northwest Pacific

Journal

QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL
Volume 239, Issue -, Pages 28-37

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.quaint.2011.02.030

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. National Park Service
  3. Don Dana
  4. Watts Family Foundation
  5. Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie
  6. Division Of Behavioral and Cognitive Sci [0917677] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Rising postglacial seas have flooded the world's continental shelves, limiting our ability to reconstruct human migrations, the history of settlement along Pleistocene coastlines, and the antiquity of coastal shell middens. This includes the southern coast of Beringia, where dramatic landscape changes make it difficult to test the coastal migration theory, which proposes that Upper Paleolithic peoples followed Pacific shorelines from northeast Asia to the Americas. To help overcome such problems, this paper discusses the paleogeography and paleoecology of Late Pleistocene North Pacific coastlines, then examines Pacific Rim technologies for possible evidence of a coastal migration. By similar to 16,000 +/- 1000 cal BP, the Pacific Rim was a plausible migration route, entirely at sea level, with rich and diverse resources from both marine and terrestrial ecosystems. Within this vast region, scattered late Pleistocene technological assemblages that include leaf-shaped bifaces and stemmed projectile points found in coastal or pen-coastal sites from Japan and Kamchatka to western North America, and much of South America may support the idea that a coastal migration contributed to the peopling of the Americas. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd and INQUA. All rights reserved.

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