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Over 15,000 years ago, a band of hunter-gatherers became the first
people to set foot in the Americas. They soon found themselves in a
world rich in plants and animals, but also a world still shivering
itself out of the coldest depths of the Ice Age. The movement of
those first Americans was one of the greatest journeys undertaken
by ancient peoples. In this book, David Meltzer explores the world
of Ice Age Americans, highlighting genetic, archaeological, and
geological evidence that has revolutionized our understanding of
their origins, antiquity, and adaptation to climate and
environmental change. This fully updated edition integrates the
most recent scientific discoveries, including the ancient genome
revolution and human evolutionary and population history. Written
for a broad audience, the book can serve as the primary text in
courses on North American Archaeology, Ice Age Environments, and
Human evolution and prehistory.
Over 15,000 years ago, a band of hunter-gatherers became the first
people to set foot in the Americas. They soon found themselves in a
world rich in plants and animals, but also a world still shivering
itself out of the coldest depths of the Ice Age. The movement of
those first Americans was one of the greatest journeys undertaken
by ancient peoples. In this book, David Meltzer explores the world
of Ice Age Americans, highlighting genetic, archaeological, and
geological evidence that has revolutionized our understanding of
their origins, antiquity, and adaptation to climate and
environmental change. This fully updated edition integrates the
most recent scientific discoveries, including the ancient genome
revolution and human evolutionary and population history. Written
for a broad audience, the book can serve as the primary text in
courses on North American Archaeology, Ice Age Environments, and
Human evolution and prehistory.
Following the discovery in Europe in the late 1850s that humanity
had roots predating known history and reaching deep into the
Pleistocene era, scientists wondered whether North American
prehistory might be just as ancient. And why not? The geological
strata seemed exactly analogous between America and Europe, which
would lead one to believe that North American humanity ought to be
as old as the European variety. This idea set off an eager race for
evidence of the people who might have occupied North America during
the Ice Age-a long, and, as it turned out, bitter and controversial
search. In The Great Paleolithic War, David J. Meltzer tells the
story of a scientific quest that set off one of the longest-running
feuds in the history of American anthropology, one so vicious at
times that anthropologists were deliberately frightened away from
investigating potential sites. Through his book, we come to
understand how and why this controversy developed and stubbornly
persisted for as long as it did; and how, in the process, it
revolutionized American archaeology.
In the late 1920s outside a sleepy remote New Mexico village,
prehistory was made. Spear points, found embedded between the ribs
of an extinct Ice Age bison at the site of Folsom, finally resolved
decades of bitter scientific controversy over whether the first
Americans had arrived in the New World in Ice Age times. Although
Folsom is justly famous in the history of archaeology for resolving
that dispute, for decades little was known of the site except that
it was very old. This book for the first time tells the full story
of Folsom. David J. Meltzer deftly combines the results of
extensive new excavations and laboratory analyses from the late
1990s, with the results of a complete examination and analysis of
all the original artifacts and bison remains recovered in the 1920s
- now scattered in museums and small towns across the country.
Using the latest in archaeological method and technique, and
bringing in data from geology and paleoecology, this
interdisciplinary study provides a comprehensive look at the
adaptations and environments of the late Ice Age Paleoindian
hunters who killed a large herd of bison at this spot, as well as a
measure of Folsom's pivotal role in American archaeology.
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