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Prehistoric Americas
First Humans in the Americas
From Channel 4's Down To Earth series by Doctor Catherine Hills, 1990
The Tolada Mountains rise from the plains of northeast Brazil.
It's a harsh and inhospitable land, but people have lived here for
thousands of years, and they left buried clues to a vanished world -
a record of occupation stretching so far back into prehistory that
it challenges accepted ideas about when people first reached the New
World.
Most archaeologists agree that there were no people in the
Americas before 12,000 years ago. But evidence unearthed at Tolada
could prove that Man was living in this area tens of thousands of
years before that It is a view that would radically change the
acknowledged picture of the movements of Prehistoric Man.
The work of prehistoric artists, found at cave sites in the
area, can tell us a lot about the kind of world they lived in. There
are familiar animals like deer, and exotic ones like the capybara,
which today live only in wet, tropical forest. So far, everything
suggests that the unique and extensive art decorating the rock
shelters developed over a very long period of time.
At the site, archaeologists have started a dig at the base of
the painted walls and found a later camp fire, used by the artists.
It is dated at 9,500 BC and is a good example of its kind,
containing the remnants of ash and charcoal. Animal bones were also
found, along with stone tools, especially flint tools. That's
significant because the nearest known source of flint is sixteen
kilometres away, so it could only have been carried to the camp fire
by the people themselves.
A deeper dig into older layers of sediment revealed paintings
that had been buried. These were made at around 10,500 BC, which
means that they are they oldest known paintings in the Americas.
In the nearby Pilau caves, settlements of around the same age
have been unearthed. Camp fires and stone tools have also been
found, along with the bones of extinct animals from Giant Sloth and
Mammoth to the Sabre Tooth cat, complete with its outsized canines.
At the foot of another cave, they are digging through what was
once an Ice Age lake. It is around this area that evidence
discovered began to point towards a much earlier settlement of the
Americas than has previously been accepted. Successive layers of
detriment have been found, dating from as recently as 8,000 BC to as
far back as 32,000 and 43,000 BC. Assorted weapons, blades, choppers
and some tools, have been discovered, pointing to a date of 48,000
BC for the first occupation of the area.
The established view, taken from all previous American findings,
is that the earliest migration of people into the New World took
place in around 10,000 BC. The newcomers would have crossed an Ice
Age land bridge connecting Asia with America (known as Beringia -
now the Baring Straits), following the great migrating herds of
Mammoth, Musk Ox and Caribou. But only when an ice-free corridor
through glacier-covered Canada became passable towards the end of
the last Ice Age would these people have followed the herds south,
towards the Great Plains.
Dozens of sites in the lower North American continent, such as
the Clovis site in New Mexico, document the sudden appearance,
around 9,500 BC, of a big game hunting culture in the continent.
Most of the people wore animal skins and used stone artefacts.
Skilfully crafted tools have often been found alongside, or even
buried in, the bones of large, extinct animals. Before the Clovis
era, there are absolutely no signs of any human habitation whatever.
On the seaward side of southern Chile, at Multi Verde, further
settlements have been found and dated to as far back as 30,000 BC.
They were created by a vegetarian-type people who were unrelated to
the Clovis culture of big game hunting. This seems to strengthen the
claim for a much older earliest inhabitation. Coming to America need
not have been a chance that was seized only once. Many hundreds of
people in small groups may have come across the Baring Straits over
a space of thousands of years. It is not known precisely when the
land bridge existed, and therefore how long the ice-free corridor
was available. But those things become irrelevant if the people were
using boats.
Such people could have spread gradually along the coastline
because they were already making a living from the sea. Fishing,
hunting sea mammals, collecting shellfish, snaring migrating birds
would have been their existence. The trouble with this theory is
that any evidence of proof or disproof now lies under the Pacific
Ocean. Since the Ice Age glaciers began melting, the sea levels have
risen. submerging a coastline that was then up to 100 kilometres
further offshore.
It is possible that clues to this existence may be found from
sister sites to those people's beach habitations, as they may have
ventured further up the wide rivers, heading inland to settle in
more reachable sites. But much more work is needed before a positive
result can be achieved.