A chronometric investigation of the initial peopling of the Americas

The initial peopling of the American continent marks a major event in the expansion of humans across the planet. For most of the 20th century, it was believed that a group of big-game hunters initially entered North America approximately 13,500 years ago, through the now flooded land bridge of Berin...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Becerra Valdivia, LA
Other Authors: Higham, T, Douka, K
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:c1a7505a-7ef3-4c22-aa19-158e6c838cd2
id ftuloxford:oai:ora.ox.ac.uk:uuid:c1a7505a-7ef3-4c22-aa19-158e6c838cd2
record_format openpolar
spelling ftuloxford:oai:ora.ox.ac.uk:uuid:c1a7505a-7ef3-4c22-aa19-158e6c838cd2 2023-05-15T18:49:03+02:00 A chronometric investigation of the initial peopling of the Americas Becerra Valdivia, LA Higham, T Douka, K 2020-02-26 https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:c1a7505a-7ef3-4c22-aa19-158e6c838cd2 eng eng https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:c1a7505a-7ef3-4c22-aa19-158e6c838cd2 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Radiocarbon Dating Archaeological Science Thesis 2020 ftuloxford 2022-06-28T20:23:03Z The initial peopling of the American continent marks a major event in the expansion of humans across the planet. For most of the 20th century, it was believed that a group of big-game hunters initially entered North America approximately 13,500 years ago, through the now flooded land bridge of Beringia, between modern day Siberia and Alaska. Once across, they would have moved southward through an ice-free corridor formed between the Laurentide and Cordilleran ice sheets, which began their recession after the last Ice Age. This model, however, was effectively refuted in 1997 when archaeologists found evidence in Chile, South America, which was reliably older than the North American record suggested. Today, questions associated with this dispersal are debated in First American research, and remain largely unanswered. These include the antiquity and origin of the initial arrivals, the number of migrational episodes, and the impact of human expansion in the late Quaternary faunal extinctions. In response, considering that timing is fundamental in the study of human dispersals, this investigation employs radiocarbon dating and Bayesian age modelling to build a robust chronological framework with which to elucidate broad spatio-temporal patterns. This is accomplished by obtaining reliable radiocarbon measurements for key archaeological sites across the continent, resolving dating discrepancies using a single-amino-acid isolation method, and building largescale Bayesian age models to track human presence and frame current evidence. This involved the laboratory processing of dateable material from 18 archaeological sites, the production of 133 radiocarbon dates, and the statistical analysis of archaeo-chronometric data from 41 archaeological sites in North America and Beringia. A widely used method, called ‘14C-dates-asdata’, is assessed from a radiocarbon dating perspective, and the potentially confounding effects introduced by challenges in sample processing in the analysis are demonstrated. This approach is the only ... Thesis Alaska Beringia Siberia ORA - Oxford University Research Archive
institution Open Polar
collection ORA - Oxford University Research Archive
op_collection_id ftuloxford
language English
topic Radiocarbon Dating
Archaeological Science
spellingShingle Radiocarbon Dating
Archaeological Science
Becerra Valdivia, LA
A chronometric investigation of the initial peopling of the Americas
topic_facet Radiocarbon Dating
Archaeological Science
description The initial peopling of the American continent marks a major event in the expansion of humans across the planet. For most of the 20th century, it was believed that a group of big-game hunters initially entered North America approximately 13,500 years ago, through the now flooded land bridge of Beringia, between modern day Siberia and Alaska. Once across, they would have moved southward through an ice-free corridor formed between the Laurentide and Cordilleran ice sheets, which began their recession after the last Ice Age. This model, however, was effectively refuted in 1997 when archaeologists found evidence in Chile, South America, which was reliably older than the North American record suggested. Today, questions associated with this dispersal are debated in First American research, and remain largely unanswered. These include the antiquity and origin of the initial arrivals, the number of migrational episodes, and the impact of human expansion in the late Quaternary faunal extinctions. In response, considering that timing is fundamental in the study of human dispersals, this investigation employs radiocarbon dating and Bayesian age modelling to build a robust chronological framework with which to elucidate broad spatio-temporal patterns. This is accomplished by obtaining reliable radiocarbon measurements for key archaeological sites across the continent, resolving dating discrepancies using a single-amino-acid isolation method, and building largescale Bayesian age models to track human presence and frame current evidence. This involved the laboratory processing of dateable material from 18 archaeological sites, the production of 133 radiocarbon dates, and the statistical analysis of archaeo-chronometric data from 41 archaeological sites in North America and Beringia. A widely used method, called ‘14C-dates-asdata’, is assessed from a radiocarbon dating perspective, and the potentially confounding effects introduced by challenges in sample processing in the analysis are demonstrated. This approach is the only ...
author2 Higham, T
Douka, K
format Thesis
author Becerra Valdivia, LA
author_facet Becerra Valdivia, LA
author_sort Becerra Valdivia, LA
title A chronometric investigation of the initial peopling of the Americas
title_short A chronometric investigation of the initial peopling of the Americas
title_full A chronometric investigation of the initial peopling of the Americas
title_fullStr A chronometric investigation of the initial peopling of the Americas
title_full_unstemmed A chronometric investigation of the initial peopling of the Americas
title_sort chronometric investigation of the initial peopling of the americas
publishDate 2020
url https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:c1a7505a-7ef3-4c22-aa19-158e6c838cd2
genre Alaska
Beringia
Siberia
genre_facet Alaska
Beringia
Siberia
op_relation https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:c1a7505a-7ef3-4c22-aa19-158e6c838cd2
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
_version_ 1766242495435374592