We have been taught North America was unpopulated until about 15,000 years ago when Siberians came here. There is evidence Europeans came here as long as 20,000 years ago.
Via The Washington Post:
When the crew of the Virginia scallop trawler Cinmar hauled a mastodon tusk onto the deck in 1970, another oddity dropped out of the net: a dark, tapered stone blade, nearly eight inches long and still sharp.
Forty years later, this rediscovered prehistoric slasher has reopened debate on a radical theory about who the first Americans were and when they got here.
Archaeologists have long held that North America remained unpopulated until about 15,000 years ago, when Siberian people walked or boated into Alaska and then moved down the West Coast.
But the mastodon relic found near the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay turned out to be 22,000 years old, suggesting that the blade was just as ancient.
Whoever fashioned that blade was not supposed to be here.
Its makers probably paddled from Europe and arrived in America thousands of years ahead of the western migration, making them the first Americans, argues Smithsonian Institution anthropologist Dennis Stanford.
“I think it’s feasible,” said Tom Dillehay, a prominent archaeologist at Vanderbilt University. “The evidence is building up, and it certainly warrants discussion.”
At the height of the last ice age, Stanford says, mysterious Stone Age European people known as the Solutreans paddled along an ice cap jutting into the North Atlantic. They lived like Inuits, harvesting seals and seabirds. Keep on reading...

Fascinating but foggy:
ReplyDelete1. If two objects are found in proximity to each other, what proof is there that they are the same age?
2. If we find a particular object at a particular geographic point, what proof do we have that the object has always been located at that point, or that it hasn't drifted or moved by some tectonic event?
3. Just from the sense of good journalism, why wait until paragraph 4 to mention the location of the find? Isn't that the essential variable? Finding such stuff in the Mediterranean, for instance, would not be newsworthy.
This is so plausible to me. I was a field assistant on a two season dig in Ulster County, NY many years ago. I recall that Dena Dincauze was the author of one of the studies we had to read. She had a thing for the bifurcated bases and the depth of the deposits.
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neville_archaeological_site