Archaeological Support for the Three-Stage Expansion of Modern Humans across Northeastern Eurasia and into the Americas

Background Understanding the dynamics of the human range expansion across northeastern Eurasia during the late Pleistocene is central to establishing empirical temporal constraints on the colonization of the Americas [1]. Opinions vary widely on how and when the Americas were colonized, with advocat...

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Main Authors: Buchanan, Briggs, Hamilton, Marcus
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://summit.sfu.ca/item/13336
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spelling ftsimonfu:oai:summit.sfu.ca:13336 2023-05-15T15:18:47+02:00 Archaeological Support for the Three-Stage Expansion of Modern Humans across Northeastern Eurasia and into the Americas Buchanan, Briggs Hamilton, Marcus 2010 http://summit.sfu.ca/item/13336 English eng http://summit.sfu.ca/item/13336 Article 2010 ftsimonfu 2022-04-07T18:38:46Z Background Understanding the dynamics of the human range expansion across northeastern Eurasia during the late Pleistocene is central to establishing empirical temporal constraints on the colonization of the Americas [1]. Opinions vary widely on how and when the Americas were colonized, with advocates supporting either a pre-[2] or post-[1], [3], [4], [5], [6] last glacial maximum (LGM) colonization, via either a land bridge across Beringia [3], [4], [5], a sea-faring Pacific Rim coastal route [1], [3], a trans-Arctic route [4], or a trans-Atlantic oceanic route [5]. Here we analyze a large sample of radiocarbon dates from the northeast Eurasian Upper Paleolithic to identify the origin of this expansion, and estimate the velocity of colonization wave as it moved across northern Eurasia and into the Americas. Methodology/Principal Findings We use diffusion models [6], [7] to quantify these dynamics. Our results show the expansion originated in the Altai region of southern Siberia ~46kBP , and from there expanded across northern Eurasia at an average velocity of 0.16 km per year. However, the movement of the colonizing wave was not continuous but underwent three distinct phases: 1) an initial expansion from 47-32k calBP; 2) a hiatus from ~32-16k calBP, and 3) a second expansion after the LGM ~16k calBP. These results provide archaeological support for the recently proposed three-stage model of the colonization of the Americas [8], [9]. Our results falsify the hypothesis of a pre-LGM terrestrial colonization of the Americas and we discuss the importance of these empirical results in the light of alternative models. Conclusions/Significance Our results demonstrate that the radiocarbon record of Upper Paleolithic northeastern Eurasia supports a post-LGM terrestrial colonization of the Americas falsifying the proposed pre-LGM terrestrial colonization of the Americas. We show that this expansion was not a simple process, but proceeded in three phases, consistent with genetic data, largely in response to the variable climatic conditions of late Pleistocene northeast Eurasia. Further, the constraints imposed by the spatiotemporal gradient in the empirical radiocarbon record across this entire region suggests that North America cannot have been colonized much before the existing Clovis radiocarbon record suggests. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Beringia Siberia Summit - SFU Research Repository (Simon Fraser University) Arctic Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Summit - SFU Research Repository (Simon Fraser University)
op_collection_id ftsimonfu
language English
description Background Understanding the dynamics of the human range expansion across northeastern Eurasia during the late Pleistocene is central to establishing empirical temporal constraints on the colonization of the Americas [1]. Opinions vary widely on how and when the Americas were colonized, with advocates supporting either a pre-[2] or post-[1], [3], [4], [5], [6] last glacial maximum (LGM) colonization, via either a land bridge across Beringia [3], [4], [5], a sea-faring Pacific Rim coastal route [1], [3], a trans-Arctic route [4], or a trans-Atlantic oceanic route [5]. Here we analyze a large sample of radiocarbon dates from the northeast Eurasian Upper Paleolithic to identify the origin of this expansion, and estimate the velocity of colonization wave as it moved across northern Eurasia and into the Americas. Methodology/Principal Findings We use diffusion models [6], [7] to quantify these dynamics. Our results show the expansion originated in the Altai region of southern Siberia ~46kBP , and from there expanded across northern Eurasia at an average velocity of 0.16 km per year. However, the movement of the colonizing wave was not continuous but underwent three distinct phases: 1) an initial expansion from 47-32k calBP; 2) a hiatus from ~32-16k calBP, and 3) a second expansion after the LGM ~16k calBP. These results provide archaeological support for the recently proposed three-stage model of the colonization of the Americas [8], [9]. Our results falsify the hypothesis of a pre-LGM terrestrial colonization of the Americas and we discuss the importance of these empirical results in the light of alternative models. Conclusions/Significance Our results demonstrate that the radiocarbon record of Upper Paleolithic northeastern Eurasia supports a post-LGM terrestrial colonization of the Americas falsifying the proposed pre-LGM terrestrial colonization of the Americas. We show that this expansion was not a simple process, but proceeded in three phases, consistent with genetic data, largely in response to the variable climatic conditions of late Pleistocene northeast Eurasia. Further, the constraints imposed by the spatiotemporal gradient in the empirical radiocarbon record across this entire region suggests that North America cannot have been colonized much before the existing Clovis radiocarbon record suggests.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Buchanan, Briggs
Hamilton, Marcus
spellingShingle Buchanan, Briggs
Hamilton, Marcus
Archaeological Support for the Three-Stage Expansion of Modern Humans across Northeastern Eurasia and into the Americas
author_facet Buchanan, Briggs
Hamilton, Marcus
author_sort Buchanan, Briggs
title Archaeological Support for the Three-Stage Expansion of Modern Humans across Northeastern Eurasia and into the Americas
title_short Archaeological Support for the Three-Stage Expansion of Modern Humans across Northeastern Eurasia and into the Americas
title_full Archaeological Support for the Three-Stage Expansion of Modern Humans across Northeastern Eurasia and into the Americas
title_fullStr Archaeological Support for the Three-Stage Expansion of Modern Humans across Northeastern Eurasia and into the Americas
title_full_unstemmed Archaeological Support for the Three-Stage Expansion of Modern Humans across Northeastern Eurasia and into the Americas
title_sort archaeological support for the three-stage expansion of modern humans across northeastern eurasia and into the americas
publishDate 2010
url http://summit.sfu.ca/item/13336
geographic Arctic
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genre Arctic
Beringia
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op_relation http://summit.sfu.ca/item/13336
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