The Archaeology of Ushki Lake, Kamchatka, and the Pleistocene Peopling of the Americas
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Abstract:
The Ushki Paleolithic sites of Kamchatka, Russia, have long been thought to contain information critical to the peopling of the Americas, especially the origins of Clovis. New radiocarbon dates indicate that human occupation of Ushki began only 13,000 calendar years ago-nearly 4000 years later than previously thought. Although biface industries were widespread across Beringia contemporaneous to the time of Clovis in western North America, these data suggest that late-glacial Siberians did not spread into Beringia until the end of the Pleistocene, perhaps too recently to have been ancestral to proposed pre-Clovis populations in the Americas.Keywords:
Beringia
Upper Paleolithic
The Ushki Paleolithic sites of Kamchatka, Russia, have long been thought to contain information critical to the peopling of the Americas, especially the origins of Clovis. New radiocarbon dates indicate that human occupation of Ushki began only 13,000 calendar years ago-nearly 4000 years later than previously thought. Although biface industries were widespread across Beringia contemporaneous to the time of Clovis in western North America, these data suggest that late-glacial Siberians did not spread into Beringia until the end of the Pleistocene, perhaps too recently to have been ancestral to proposed pre-Clovis populations in the Americas.
Beringia
Upper Paleolithic
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A general introduction to the Pleistocene with an emphasis on herpetological remains was presented in the companion volume Pleistocene Amphibians and Reptiles in North America (Holman, 1995c). For a general introduction to the Pleistocene that gives much attention to Britain and Europe, the reader is referred to Sutcliffe (1985). A detailed account of Pleistocene mammals in Britain is given by Stuart (1982), and a general account of Pleistocene mammals in Europe is given by Kurten (1968). The present chapter deals mainly with chronological divisions of the Pleistocene in Britain and Europe. Early geologists recognized that glacial deposits and land forms existed far south of existing glaciated areas, and they correctly reasoned that these features indicated not only the presence of ice sheets but the onset of cold climates, as well. As these features were mapped and stratigraphic studies were made, it was found that some sections contained weathered zones of organic soils and plant remains between layers of glacially derived sediments. It was suggested that these organic zones represented nonglacial environments and that ice sheets must have advanced and retreated several times. In Europe, before studies of deep sea sediments were made, Pleistocene chronological events were determined on the basis of piecemeal evidence from terrestrial sediments. The earliest widely accepted chronology of climatic Pleistocene intervals was the classic fourfold subdivision of Pleistocene glacial events in the Alps by Penck and Bruckner (1909). These glacial stage names, from oldest to youngest, are Gu'nz glacial, Mindcl glacial, Riss glacial, and Wiirm glacial. Between the glacial stages, intcrglacial stages were designated by compound names based on the underlying and overlying glacial stages (e.g., The Gunz-Mindel intcrglacial stage lies between the Giinz and Mindel glacial stages). These Alpine glacial stages have been widely used, and one still finds references to them (especially the younger stages) in the recent literature (e.g., Fritz, 1995).
Early Pleistocene
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The criticisms and views expressed in the recently circulated preliminary report of the Pleistocene committee of the American Commission on Stratigraphic Nomenclature on the present stratigraphic system of classification of the Quaternary suggest some lack of familiarity with the classic area of the Middle West. The multiple classification that the committee recommends, excellent as it may be for the older rocks, is not compatible with the nature of the glacial Pleistocene. The classification for the older rocks is the natural result of acquiring an understanding of them, just as the present classification of the glacial Pleistocene has evolved from decades of investigation. The classic area of the glacial Pleistocene comprises all of the type areas for the known glacial and interglacial stages of North America. So influential were the climates on most geologic processes, even in the depths of the ocean, that correlations with the glacial and interglacial stages of the Pleistocene are sought from all quarters. It is therefore important that the system of stratigraphic classification for the glacial Pleistocene shall be one that is naturally adapted to it rather than one that applies to marine strata. The non-glacial Pleistocene, however, may well be susceptible to the latter.
Early Pleistocene
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New radiocarbon dates on four artifacts that were thought to provide evidence for human occupation of the Yukon Territory during the upper Pleistocene indicate that all four are of late Holocene age. The original radiocarbon age obtained for one artifact (the so-called "Old Crow flesher") was in error by almost 26,000 years.
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