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1.
Science ; 373(6562): 1528-1531, 2021 Sep 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34554787

RESUMO

Archaeologists and researchers in allied fields have long sought to understand human colonization of North America. Questions remain about when and how people migrated, where they originated, and how their arrival affected the established fauna and landscape. Here, we present evidence from excavated surfaces in White Sands National Park (New Mexico, United States), where multiple in situ human footprints are stratigraphically constrained and bracketed by seed layers that yield calibrated radiocarbon ages between ~23 and 21 thousand years ago. These findings confirm the presence of humans in North America during the Last Glacial Maximum, adding evidence to the antiquity of human colonization of the Americas and providing a temporal range extension for the coexistence of early inhabitants and Pleistocene megafauna.


Assuntos
Fósseis , Migração Humana , Mudança Climática , , Sedimentos Geológicos , História Antiga , Humanos , Camada de Gelo , New Mexico , América do Norte
2.
Sci Adv ; 4(4): eaar7621, 2018 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29707640

RESUMO

Predator-prey interactions revealed by vertebrate trace fossils are extremely rare. We present footprint evidence from White Sands National Monument in New Mexico for the association of sloth and human trackways. Geologically, the sloth and human trackways were made contemporaneously, and the sloth trackways show evidence of evasion and defensive behavior when associated with human tracks. Behavioral inferences from these trackways indicate prey selection and suggest that humans were harassing, stalking, and/or hunting the now-extinct giant ground sloth in the terminal Pleistocene.


Assuntos
Arqueologia , Paleontologia , Bichos-Preguiça , Animais , Fósseis , Geologia , Humanos , América do Norte
3.
Sci Adv ; 2(5): e1600375, 2016 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27386553

RESUMO

Stone tools and mastodon bones occur in an undisturbed geological context at the Page-Ladson site, Florida. Seventy-one radiocarbon ages show that ~14,550 calendar years ago (cal yr B.P.), people butchered or scavenged a mastodon next to a pond in a bedrock sinkhole within the Aucilla River. This occupation surface was buried by ~4 m of sediment during the late Pleistocene marine transgression, which also left the site submerged. Sporormiella and other proxy evidence from the sediments indicate that hunter-gatherers along the Gulf Coastal Plain coexisted with and utilized megafauna for ~2000 years before these animals became extinct at ~12,600 cal yr B.P. Page-Ladson expands our understanding of the earliest colonizers of the Americas and human-megafauna interaction before extinction.


Assuntos
Arqueologia , Fósseis , Animais , Extinção Biológica , Florida , Geografia , História Antiga , Humanos , Dinâmica Populacional , Datação Radiométrica
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