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Judi Lynn

(160,516 posts)
Fri May 13, 2016, 11:30 PM May 2016

Early snowbirds? Florida sinkhole yields ancient artifacts

Early snowbirds? Florida sinkhole yields ancient artifacts

Published: Friday, May 13, 2016 at 8:30 p.m.
Last Modified: Friday, May 13, 2016 at 8:30 p.m.

NEW YORK (AP) — A stone knife and other artifacts found deep underwater in a Florida sinkhole show people lived in that area some 14,500 years ago.

Experts said that makes the ancient sinkhole the earliest well-documented site for human presence in the southeastern U.S.

The site is about 30 miles southeast of Tallahassee. Divers recovered the artifacts under about 30 feet of water. The discovery confirms earlier indications that people visited the sinkhole more than 14,000 years ago.

The new work was reported Friday in a paper released by the journal Science Advances.

http://www.goupstate.com/article/20160513/APN/305139747

(Short article, no more at link.)

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Early snowbirds? Florida sinkhole yields ancient artifacts (Original Post) Judi Lynn May 2016 OP
The more we look, the more we discover about the history made here. Agnosticsherbet May 2016 #1
More from the BBC nitpicker May 2016 #2

nitpicker

(7,153 posts)
2. More from the BBC
Sat May 14, 2016, 03:57 AM
May 2016
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-36286548

Mastodon meal scraps revise US prehistory

By Jonathan Webb
Science reporter, BBC News

5 hours ago

Stone tools and bones from a butchered mastodon, found at the bottom of a river in Florida, are shaking up the known history of humans in the region. A four-year investigation of the site has firmly concluded that humans lived there and, in particular, made a meal of a mastodon 14,550 years ago. This is more than a millennium earlier than humans were thought to have settled the south-eastern US.
(snip)

They reinforce the idea that humans settled the Americas well before the Clovis people arrived about 13,000 years ago. For many years, the Clovis were thought to have been "the first Americans".

In fact, the mastodon tusk that is the centrepiece of the Florida haul, complete with apparent cut marks and accompanying tools, was first found and dated in the 1980s - but the discovery gained little traction. "[It] was an impossible date for the scientific community to accept at the time, because it was well accepted that the Americas were colonised by the Clovis people, who arrived on the continent over the Bering land bridge no longer than 13,500 years ago at the oldest," said Jessi Halligan, lead author of the new study and assistant professor of anthropology at Florida State University.

That view, however, has gradually been revised as more and more evidence accumulates that humans arrived thousands of years earlier - perhaps as early as 16,000 years ago, when the last ice age was only beginning to thaw. But that evidence remains scarce, and the new study provides the best evidence yet for such a presence in the south-east of the US.

For the new study, the original tusk was re-examined and a wealth of further evidence, including many more tools, dung samples and animal bones, was excavated from the same murky sinkhole 10m under the waters of the Aucilla River. Before the river and sediments were laid down, this area appears to have contained a water hole where both animals and humans gathered. The mastadon was either hunted or scavenged, and butchered using tools like the small stone knives found at the scene.
(snip)
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