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12,500-year-old remains providing science with more theories about the First Nations in America

  

Category:  Anthropology & Archeology

Via:  kavika  •  10 years ago  •  19 comments

12,500-year-old remains providing science with more theories about the First Nations in America

12,500-year-old remains providing science with more theories about First Nations in America

From TheStar.com

What a 12,500-year-old toddler says about the mystery surrounding Native American origins

Nature study sequenced genome of 12,500 year old boy discovered buried with Clovis spear points, the first ancient American genome ever sequenced

The site in Montana where stone tools with distinctive Clovis features and the 12,500-year-old skeleton of a child were discovered. The child's genome has been sequenced, uncovering new information about the first people in the Americas.

MIKE WATERS

The site in Montana where stone tools with distinctive Clovis features and the 12,500-year-old skeleton of a child were discovered. The child's genome has been sequenced, uncovering new information about the first people in the Americas.

By: Kate Allen Science and Technology reporter,Published on Wed Feb 12 2014

The little boy was no more than 18 months old when he was buried 12,500 years ago in what is now Montana. His body was covered in red ochre, and so were the tools found on top of him - tools that bear the distinctive marks of the Clovis culture.

Clovis artifacts scattered across the U.S., Canada and Mexico are the oldest widespread evidence of human habitation in the Americas. But the history of the people who made them has been a matter of intense debate. What is their relationship to Native Americans living today? And where did they originally come from: East Asia and Siberia, as most scientists believe, or from southwestern Europe, as a more controversial theory holds?

By sequencing the genome of the ochre-covered little boy - the first ever of an ancient American - researchers have answered these questions, helped shed light on the genetic history of Native Americans, and generated a few new mysteries to boot.

"It's almost like finding a missing link, which is really incredible, because I always learned in school you never find a missing link," said Eske Willerslev, director of the Center for Geogenetics and lead author of the study, which is published in Thursday's issue of Nature.

The ochre boy's remains were found in 1968 by a construction worker clearing a hill at the Anzick family ranch near Wilsall, Montana, a site that sits in a basin between two Rocky Mountains.

More than 100 stone blades with distinctive Clovis features were stacked like cards above the bones. So were a handful of wand-like rods of antler, at least one from a rare elk. Everything was stained with deep iron-red dust.

Because only pieces of the boy's skull and clavicle were found, scientists don't know how he died or anything else about him. But there are hints he was special: some of the tools buried with him were much older than his remains and may have been heirlooms. They appear to have been purposely snapped.

His is the only skeleton ever found that can be linked to Clovis artifacts. Researchers, including Sarah Anzick, who was just a child when the boy was discovered on her family's farm and who is now a genetic scientist, were anxious to learn more about him. That goal was made possible by advances in genetic technology.

Initial testing found that his mitochondrial DNA haplogroup - information that reveals maternal lineage - was D4h3a, a group only ever discovered in Native Americans. Contemporary people with the D4h3a haplogroup, while rare, mostly live along the Pacific Coast in North and South America.

The researchers then sequenced the boy's nuclear DNA and compared his genetic affinity to 143 modern populations, including 52 Native American ones. They also analyzed the boy's DNA against a 24,000-year-old Siberian child whose sequenced genome was published in November and two other ancient humans from China and Greenland.

The results showed that all Native Americans are effectively direct descendants of the people who made Clovis tools and buried the ochre boy. The study also supports the theory that an East Asian and a Siberian group intermingled before crossing over into North America, refuting the hypothesis that Clovis came from Europe.

"This discovery basically confirms what tribes have never really doubted: that we've been here since time immemorial, and that all the artifacts and objects in the ground are remnants of our direct ancestors," says Shane Doyle , a study co-author and a member of the Crow tribe of Montana.

Interestingly, however, the boy shared less genetic history with seven groups from Northern Canada and the Arctic, and more with groups from central and South America. Different theories could explain this, but Willerslev believes that the wave of people who entered America split into two groups early on.

One family went south and developed the culture we associate with Clovis tools. About the group that remained north, we know nothing - until more skeletons or artifacts are discovered. This theory could, however, explain the spear points and fossilized human excrement discovered at Paisley Caves in Oregon that dates to pre-Clovis times.

Nick Patterson , a senior scientist at the Broad Institute who has studied early human genetic history, called the research "excellent," and added: "I don't think it changes the big picture, but it fills in some details."

Dennis Stanford, author of Across Atlantic Ice , a book that argues the Clovis technology and people came from Spain and France, dismissed the study. He questioned whether the boy was really Clovis, since his burial site was initially excavated improperly by amateurs.

Willerslev and his colleagues, cognizant that generations of past researchers had made off with Native American remains and artifacts in the name of science, met in person with tribal people and elders in Montana before embarking on this study. The Native Americans were supportive of the research, the scientists said, but asked again and again for the ochre boy to be reburied. Come springtime, the team will do exactly that.

"We've gotten a tremendous amount of information," said Doyle. "This boy has gifted us far more than anyone could have ever dreamed of, and now it's time to put him back to rest."


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Kavika
Professor Principal
link   seeder  Kavika     10 years ago

His remains were returned to the tribe for a proper burial.

More information

 
 
 
Dowser
Sophomore Quiet
link   Dowser    10 years ago

How utterly fascinating!

I love how the author of a book about European descent manages to ignore what was found... It reminds me of the Egyptologists who refute the geologists time dating of the Great Pyramids, based on actual weathering conditions.

Thanks for this-- I look forward to learning more!

 
 
 
Dowser
Sophomore Quiet
link   Dowser    10 years ago

I'm glad to hear that. He was obviously beloved in life. I feel for those who loved and lost him. The loss of a precious child is a universal grief.

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
link   seeder  Kavika     10 years ago

Yup, the Eurocentric don't want to admit that they are wong.

There are two other articles on the front page that are amazing discoveries. All of these coming within months of each other.

You should read, ''Red Earth, White Lies'' by Vine DeLoria. He takes on this very problem. A great read.

 
 
 
deepwater don
Freshman Silent
link   deepwater don    10 years ago

I should have been a archeologist/paleontologist/geologist! I love reading about this. More info to come more interesting reading(and learning) for mw. Thanks,K

 
 
 
Nona62
Professor Silent
link   Nona62    10 years ago

I'm so glad that the boy will finally get a proper burial and finally rest in Peace.

Great article Kav!

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
link   seeder  Kavika     10 years ago

dd, if I had it to do all over again, I would be in one of the fields that you mentioned. Or a linguist.

I just love this stuff.

 
 
 
Nigel Dogberry
Freshman Silent
link   Nigel Dogberry    10 years ago

The results showed that all Native Americans are effectively direct descendants of the people who made Clovis tools and buried the ochre boy. The study also supports the theory that an East Asian and a Siberian group intermingled before crossing over into North America, refuting the hypothesis that Clovis came from Europe.

I didn't know that any Clovis remains had been found. Thanks for finding this.

 
 
 
Dowser
Sophomore Quiet
link   Dowser    10 years ago

Thanks, Kavika! I will look for it!

Smile.gif

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
link   seeder  Kavika     10 years ago

It gets more interesting with every new find Grump.

The oral history of many tribes are being found to be accurate in the new discoveries.

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
link   seeder  Kavika     10 years ago

Thanks Nona.

 
 
 
Nigel Dogberry
Freshman Silent
link   Nigel Dogberry    10 years ago

I read 1491, too. Yup, an eye opener for me. Very good book.

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
link   seeder  Kavika     10 years ago

1491, an excellent book. Another good one is ''An Indigenous History of the US'', by Howard Zinn.

 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
link   Bob Nelson    10 years ago

Fascinating article.

Thank you.

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
link   seeder  Kavika     10 years ago

Thank you Bob,

I posted a couple of other on the front page on recent discoveries.

Merry Christmas to you and yours.

 
 
 
bitemore Gfotwo
Professor Silent
link   bitemore Gfotwo    10 years ago

Fascinating stuff, for sure! I think that in my next incarnation I will be an anthropologist! I love stuff like this!

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
link   seeder  Kavika     10 years ago

Happy that your enjoyed it bitemore. I posted 3 other discoveries as well.

 
 
 
screminmimi
Freshman Silent
link   screminmimi    10 years ago

This is so exciting, and the article itself was very interesting.

It's not surprising that those who have made a very good living off another theory are fighting the authenticity of the find.

On a note: the broken tools with the body, which were much older than the boy, make me think he might have been the last of a bloodline, and that the broken tools indicate no other will come after to wield them.

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
link   seeder  Kavika     10 years ago

Interesting theory Mimi. It should certainly be considered as a possibility.

 
 

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