Where Native Americans come from

Treasure_Hunter

Administrator
Staff member
Jul 27, 2006
48,432
54,818
Florida
Detector(s) used
Minelab_Equinox_ 800 Minelab_CTX-3030 Minelab_Excal_1000 Minelab_Sovereign_GT Minelab_Safari Minelab_ETrac Whites_Beach_Hunter_ID Fisher_1235_X
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Thought some may enjoy the read....

Where Native Americans come from


All tribes seem to derive from the same Asian roots, DNA indicates


TINA HESMAN SAEY

FEB 18, 2014 – 9:00 AM EST



ts_cover4_free.jpg



Here is a sampling of the stone and bone tools buried with a baby who died some 12,600 years ago. They identify him as one of the Clovis people, a culture that dominated the United States and northern Mexico long ago.


M. RASMUSSEN ET AL.


DNA from an ancient baby’s skeleton shows that all Native Americans descend from a single gene pool. And their ancestral roots are in Asia, a new study finds.
The bones came from a roughly 12- to 18-month-old boy. He died about 12,600 years ago in what is now Montana. Construction workers uncovered the grave in 1968. It remains the only known burial site of a person from the Clovis culture.
Clovis is the name of prehistoric people. They lived in what is now the United States and northern Mexico between about 13,000 and 12,600 years ago. They made a type of stone spear point that differs from stone tools found elsewhere in the world at the time.
The young boy had been covered in red ochre. It’s a natural pigment that had often been used in burial rituals at the time. More than 100 tools had been placed atop his body when it was buried. Those tools also had been dipped in red ochre.
Some were the stone spear points or tools used to make the spear points.. People had fashioned rods from elk antlers, a rare material in Montana at the time. The bone tools were 13,000 years old – hundreds of years older than the child’s parents. The bone rods had been deliberately broken before being placed with the boy’s body. That suggests these ancient tools could have been family “heirlooms,” the scientists say.
All of those details are fairly old. Decades old, at least.
What’s new are analyses of the Clovis child’s DNA. Just reported in the Feb. 13 Nature,they indicate that the Clovis people were ancestors of all present-day Native Americans. And like today’s Native Americans, the Clovis baby – known as Anzick-1 – can trace part of his heritage to a child known as the Mal’ta boy. He lived in Siberia 24,000 years ago. That link now suggests that all Native American populations share a common Asian heritage.
clovisbaby.jpg

This is where the Clovis baby’s skeleton was unearthed. The pole (center left) marks the burial site, which look out towards scenic, snow-capped mountains.MIKE WATERS
From Asian – not European – roots


“This clearly shows that the homeland of the first Americans was Asia,” says study coauthor Michael Waters. He’s a geologist and archaeologist at Texas A&M University in College Station.
The study may put to rest an oft-reported idea that ancient Europeans crossed the Atlantic and established the Clovis culture. That idea has been known as the Solutrean hypothesis. The new analysis is “the last spade full of earth on the grave of the Solutrean hypothesis,” says Jennifer Raff. An anthropological geneticist, she works at the University of Texas at Austin. She had no role in the current analysis.
The study also may settle speculation about the Clovis people’s relationship to modern Native Americans. Clovis culture was widespread for 400 years after the last Ice Age. Other styles of tool making eventually replaced the distinctive stone spear points made by Clovis people. That was among clues indicating that other American settlers might have replaced the Clovis people.
“Their technology and tools vanished, but now we understand that their genetic legacy lives on,” says Sarah Anzick, a coauthor of the new study.
Anzick was 2 years old when the baby’s grave was found on her family’s land. Since then, she and her family have been stewards of the bones, keeping them respectfully preserved and locked away.
Respecting the bones

In time, Anzick became a molecular biologist, at one point working on the Human Genome Project. (Completed in April 2003, it gave scientists an ability to read a person’s full genetic blueprints.) Based on that experience, Anzick made it a personal goal to decipher the Clovis baby’s DNA.
So she traveled with the child’s bones to the lab of Eske Willerslev. He’s an evolutionary geneticist at the University of Copenhagen, in Denmark. There, she helped extract DNA from the skeleton and performed some of the initial tests. Willerslev and his colleagues completed the rest of the toddler’s genetic blueprints.
Their examination shows that about one-third of the Clovis baby’s genome traces back to the ancient Siberian people, says Willerslev. The remainder, he says, comes from an ancestral East Asian population. The new data suggest East Asians and Siberians interbred before the Clovis era. Their descendants would have become the founding population for all later Native Americans.
About four out of five Native Americans, mainly those in Central and South America, probably descend directly from the Anzick baby’s people, Willerslev says. Other native peoples, such as those in Canada, are closely related to the Clovis child. They, however, come from a different branch of the family.
Anzick iand members of several Native American tribes are preparing to rebury the baby’s remains where his parents had left him more than 12 millennia ago. It’s at the base of a sandstone cliff. The site overlooks a creek with views of three mountain ranges.
Power Words

archaeology The study of human history and prehistory through the excavation of sites and the analysis of artifacts and other physical remains. People who work in this field are known as archaeologists.
Clovis people Prehistoric humans who inhabited much of North America between about 13,000 and 12,600 years ago. They are known primarily by the cultural artifacts they left behind, especially a type of stone point used on hunting spears. It’s called the Clovis point. It was named after Clovis, New Mexico, where someone first found this type of stone tool.
gene A segment of DNA that codes, or holds instructions, for producing a protein. Offspring inherit genes from their parents. Genes influence how an organism looks and behaves.
evolutionary genetics A field of biology that focuses on how genes – and the traits they lead to – change over long periods of time (potentially over millennia or more). People who work in this field are known as evolutionary geneticists
genome The complete set of genes or genetic material in a cell or an organism.
geology The study of Earth’s physical structure and substance, its history and the processes that act on it. People who work in this field are known as geologists.
Ice Age Earth has experienced at least five major Ice Ages, which are prolonged periods of unusually cold weather experienced by much of the planet. During that time, which can last hundreds to thousands of years, glaciers and ice sheets expand in size and depth. The most recent Ice Age peaked 21,500 years ago, but continued until about 13,000 years ago.
molecular biology The branch of biology that deals with the structure and function of molecules essential to life. Scientists who work in this field are called molecular biologists.
pigment A material, like the natural colorings in paints and dyes, that alter the light reflected off of an object or transmitted through it. The overall color of a pigment typically depends on which wavelengths of visible light it absorbs and which ones it reflects. For example, a red pigment tends to reflect red wavelengths of light very well and typically absorbs other colors.
red ochre A natural pigment often been used in ancient burial rituals.
Solutrean hypothesis The idea that ancient Europeans crossed the Atlantic and established the Clovis culture.
Stone Age A prehistoric period, lasting millions of years and ending tens of thousands of years ago, when weapons and tools were made of stone or of materials such as bone, wood, or horn.

https://www.sciencenewsforstudents.org/article/where-native-americans-come













https://www.sciencenewsforstudents.org/article/where-native-americans-come
 

Upvote 0

1320

Silver Member
Dec 10, 2004
3,434
2,308
East Central Kentucky
Very good read, thanks for the share. Makes me wonder why we haven't found more Clovis burials. Also of interest is the purpose breaking of some of the tools. This says to me that in the event the tools were recovered at a later date, they would be useless to the finder. "Go make your own tools"......

For this very reason, I keep an open mind regarding snapped base Kirks.
 

Tnmountains

Super Moderator
Staff member
Jan 27, 2009
18,714
11,703
South East Tennessee on Ga, Ala line
🥇 Banner finds
1
Detector(s) used
Tesoro Conquistador freq shift
Fisher F75
Garrett AT-Pro
Garet carrot
Neodymium magnets
5' Probe
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Very good read, thanks for the share. Makes me wonder why we haven't found more Clovis burials. Also of interest is the purpose breaking of some of the tools. This says to me that in the event the tools were recovered at a later date, they would be useless to the finder. "Go make your own tools"......

For this very reason, I keep an open mind regarding snapped base Kirks.

I also keep a very open mind about the snapped base kirk theory. Considering many bases are worked at the snap and with similiar patina. I tried to get bob Overstreet to chime in here some few years ago about his typology but he would not. A friend of mine bought his house.
Thanks Treasure Hunter.
 

unclemac

Gold Member
Oct 12, 2011
7,012
6,893
Primary Interest:
Beach & Shallow Water Hunting
dna research is becoming more and more interesting and amazing
 

Road Dog

Hero Member
Apr 16, 2009
814
392
North Carolina
Great read. No doubt modern Native Americans have these origins. This has been known for some time. Also, there have been earlier Cultures dating before and even coexisting with Clovis. Remains of early people have been found sharing no common characteristics of the Asian originated American Indian.
 

unclemac

Gold Member
Oct 12, 2011
7,012
6,893
Primary Interest:
Beach & Shallow Water Hunting
Clovis remains the only indisputable earliest cultural identity...everything else is still open to interpretation, debate and further research. and i say this discounting ANYTHING from Alaska which is a whole 'nuther ball of wax.
 

IAMZIM

Bronze Member
Apr 23, 2011
1,567
2,160
Butte City, Montana
Detector(s) used
ace 250/garret pinpointer, garret AT Gold
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Latest Discussions

Top