'Paleoamericans' were the ancient peoples of the Americas who were present at the end of the last
Ice Age. The prefix "paleo" comes from the Greek palaios meaning ancient, and refers to the
Upper Paleolithic time period. The best known of these peoples were part of the
Clovis culture. However, evidence of several pre-Clovis Paleo-Indian cultures also exist.
Paleoamericans are believed to be the first people to have inhabited a large number of areas in the Americas, though there is now some doubt as to whether they were the first inhabitants of the continent as a whole. The current prevailing theory postulates that Paleo-Indians entered the Americas from Asia via a land bridge (
Bering) connecting eastern
Siberia with present-day
Alaska when sea levels were significantly lower because of widespread glaciation between about 15,000 to 35,000 years ago. However, evidence suggestive of even earlier human occupation in South America at sites like
Monte Verde in
Chile (35,000 years), or in North America at site of Topper (50,000 years ago), have generated an alternative theory that Paleo-Indians, or at least some groups of them, may have come from the Pacific Islands or mainland Asia by watercraft.
Paleoamericans are believed to have been
nomadic
hunter-gatherers (They hunted a type of
huge sloth, a type of
bison and
camels) whose following of animal migrations dictated where they camped. As the glaciers that covered much of North America receded in the warming climate following the most recent glacial maximum,
tundra foliage was the main plant growth. Paleo-Indians living in the tundra hunted both large mammals like prehistoric
bear, bison, and
caribou, as well as smaller mammals like
hare and
arctic fox. Paleo-Indians also lived in the
taiga, forested steppe, semi-arid temperate woodlands, and other
ecozones. Paleoamericans are known to have hunted with both fluted stone-pointed wooden lancing spears and shorter spears thrown using an
atlatl; they probably also foraged for edible plants.
Paleoamericans likely traveled in small groups of approximately 20 or 50 members of an extended family. Archaeological evidence of particular kinds of fluted stone have been uncovered, suggesting trade occurred between such groups.
Archaic stage Modern day native Americans are the direct descendants.
See also
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Models of migration to the New World
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Clovis culture
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Big Eddy Site
External links
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Smithsonian Institute: Paleoamerican Origins
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Paleoindian & Other Archaeological Stuff
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Possible pre-Clovis Site in Ohio
Further reading
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The Early Settlement of North America: the Clovis Era, Haynes, Gary, , , Cambridge University Press, 2002, ISBN 0-521-52463-6