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Paleo-Indians were the earliest people to inhabit the Americas. Between 30,000 and 11,000 years ago, small, highly mobile groups of hunter-gatherers extended their hunting areas throughout Beringia (the landmass that joined Siberia and Alaska) and into the Western Hemisphere. This "bridging landmass" emerged slowly from beneath the Bering Sea as more than nine million cubic miles of glacial ice accumulated over southern Alaska, Canada, Labrador, and Greenland. About 20,000 to 18,000 years ago an immense "ice dome" (the Laurentide glacier) towered more than one mile over present-day Hudson Bay. Two lobes of ice spread southward over the eastern edge of the Dakotas and deeper into the Midwest. The Central and Southern Great Plains remained unglaciated at this time, yet the mountains of glacial ice to the north exerted pronounced influences upon the everyday lives of the Paleo-Indians throughout the region.
Archeologists believe that Paleo-Indians expanded
into certain ice-free areas of North
America's interior, or along its coastal margins.
The timing of the arrival of Paleo-Indians in
the Great Plains and in North America, in general,
is under renewed investigation. Recent
genetic studies based on mitochondrial DNA
suggest that a founding population composed
of four distinct genetic lineages appeared in
the Western Hemisphere between 37,000 and
23,000 years before present (B.P.). It appears
that all contemporary Native Americans are
descendants of these Paleo-Indian lineages, including
the hunter-gatherers who made their
appearance in the Great Plains 18,000 years ago
or earlier.
During the last Ice Age, the Great Plains was
inhabited by a diverse array of animals, including
the Columbian mammoth, musk oxen,
caribou, horse, camel, bison, elk, lion, wolf, arctic
ground squirrels, arctic shrews, and lemmings.
Around 14,500 B.P. the Northern Hemisphere
began to warm and the glaciers began to
shrink. The ice over North America essentially
disappeared by 6,500 B.P. Mosaic communities
of plants and animals were reshuÄed and sorted
into their characteristic zonal patterns of today.
Many large herbivorous and carnivorous mammals
were unable to make the necessary shifts in
diet, reproduction, and morphology and became
extinct between 12,000 and 10,000 B.P.
Some scientists have attributed the disappearance
of many larger mammals to the superior
predatory abilities of the Paleo-Indians themselves.
There is little reason to believe that
Paleo-Indian hunter-gatherers had any significant
role in these global animal extinctions;
such extinctions had occurred many times before,
particularly during abrupt shifts from
colder glacial to warmer interglacial periods.
The most abundant physical evidence for Paleo-Indians in the Plains consists of a diverse array of carefully made chipped stone projectile points that were given geographical placenames like Clovis, Goshen, Folsom, Midland, Plainview, Cody, Alberta, Hell Gap, Scottsbluff, and Eden. Hunting weapons were probably constructed from interchangeable parts that were frequently repaired and recycled. Certain chipped stone points (e.g., Clovis, Folsom, and Goshen) were attached to short, fletched "dart" shafts and thrown with the use of a leverlike spear thrower, or atlatl. Paleo- Indian flint knappers developed an extremely efficient eleven-step method for transforming a large flake of high-quality stone into a multipurpose cutting implement and, later, into a Folsom point, two "razor blades," and a "lathe" tool. Larger stone points (e.g., Scottsbluff, Hell Gap, and Alberta) functioned as thrusting spears for dispatching bison that had been driven into natural traps created by parabolic sand dunes, deep gullies, or snowdrifts. Paleo- Indian tool kits also included chipped stone tools required to skin and butcher game, scrape skins and hides, and fashion specialized tools and component parts (e.g., foreshafts, shaft straighteners, and delicate eyed needles) of bone, antler, ivory, and wood.
One of the first documented discoveries of
Paleo-Indian stone tools found together with
the bones of extinct Ice Age animals in North
America was made by H. T. Martin and T. R.
Overton in 1895 near Russell Springs, Kansas. A
similar find was made by George McJunkin–a
cowboy, naturalist, and former black slave–in
1908 near Folsom, New Mexico. But it was not
until August 29, 1927, that a fluted spear or
"dart" point (Folsom) was found by archeologists
among the bones of extinct bison (Bison
antiquus) at McJunkin's Folsom site. Paleontologists,
archeologists, and anthropologists
were called to inspect this find in its undisturbed
context, and only then did the scientific
community agree that humans had lived contemporaneously
with these now-extinct animals
at the end of the last Ice Age.
These accidental finds sparked the initial
systematic studies of the Paleo-Indian presence
in the North American Great Plains.
In the 1930s Clovis projectile points (dated
11,200–10,900 B.P.) were found with the remains
of extinct Ice Age elephants (mammoths)
and also bison near Clovis, New Mexico.
Later Paleo-Indian occupations (10,000–
8,800 B.P.), including the Cody complex on
the Northern Plains and the Firstview complex
on the Southern Plains, featured a number
of chipped stone projectile points. With
the development of radiocarbon dating in the
1950s, as well as the excavation of "layer-cakelike"
sites at Blackwater Draw, New Mexico,
and Hell Gap, Wyoming, archeologists outlined
the time frame for Paleo-Indian life in
the Great Plains that is used today.
Paleo-Indians left a scant "trail" throughout the Great Plains. Geographer Vance Holliday has estimated that archeologists have found roughly two Paleo-Indian campsites for each century of their currently documented 2,400- year-long stay in the Great Plains. In the Southern High Plains, this means that there is one Paleo-Indian campsite per 667 square miles (1,733 square kilometers). Yet Paleo-Indian sites are still being discovered, including campsites (e.g., Mill Iron, Montana; Lake Ilo, North Dakota; and Cattle Guard, Colorado), animal kill sites (e.g., Waugh and Cooper sites in Kansas), tool caches (e.g., Anzick, Montana; Fenn, Wyoming; and Ryan, Texas), and tool stone quarries and/or workshops (e.g., Alkali Creek, North Dakota, and Hanson, Wyoming).
Researchers have also intensified their efforts to revise and to reformulate their reconstructions of past environments and Paleo-Indian life. Archeologists had generally assumed that the Great Plains during the late glacial period supported a widespread boreal forest composed predominantly of spruce trees. This spruce forest reconstruction is not supported by a fossil record that is dominated by grazing and browsing mammals. Also, paleoecologists now suggest that much, if not all, of the spruce and pine pollen was not endemic and had actually been deposited over the Plains by westerly winds.
Recent studies suggest that Paleo-Indian hunter-gatherers, specifically Folsom people, lived in small, multifamily groups. These groups or hunting bands may have established from twelve to thirty-six camps per year throughout an area of more than 52,000 square miles (slightly less than the area of North Dakota). Folsom-age projectile points have been found more than 300 miles (500 km) from their geological source. It appears that Paleo-Indians quickly located sources for the highest-quality tool stone in the Plains, including Knife River flint (western North Dakota), Niobrara jasper (Nebraska), and Edwards chert (Texas).
The Great Plains has played, and continues to play, a central role in the study of Paleo- Indian lifeways in the Western Hemisphere. Recent work by Steve Holen (Nebraska State Museum) at mammoth death sites may push the initial human occupation of the Great Plains back to more than 18,000 years ago. Such recent research also suggests that the earliest Paleo-Indians may have scavenged food from large mammal carcasses. Archeologists are making use of refined radiocarbon dating methods and more dynamic views of prehistoric technology to reassess the static Paleo- Indian "culture histories" that once dominated their thinking. Archeologists working in the Great Plains have now begun to bring the faint outlines of Paleo-Indian existence into better focus.
See also PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT: Glaciation; Paleoenvironments.