11月3日付サイトPhys.orgサイエンスが、認めた!

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米国複数機関の人類学者チームが、11月3日付サイトPhys.org(下記)で、人類の米大陸への初渡米について、当サイトの既報告と同様内容の発表を行いました。

誰が、何処からかは書いてありませんが。そのポイントは以下の通りです。

①定説の14,000年前頃の北米クロービス文化人がベーリング地峡から来たというのは間違い。南米含めて古い遺跡が発見されてきている。

②歩いて来たんじゃない、舟で食が豊かな当時の北太平洋沿岸の「昆布kelpハイウェイ」から来た。

③海水面の上昇で今は海面下である彼らの暮らしから、沖合offshoreの研究が必要だ。

その通りですが、私は、北極海の冷水がベーリング地峡で止まりベーリング海に流れ込まなかった時代の地域の状況を考察する諸学協同の環境シミュレーション(気温、動植物食料等)が重要だと思います。

いずれにしろ、既諸報告のとおり、日本祖人が北海道から30,000年前以降も島々沿岸の北上を続け、初渡米したものと考えています。

記事では、日本の遺跡について、写真の中で -16000~13000としてます、日本の事のPR不足ですね!

日本列島史は40,000年前からで、37,000年前には伊豆・神津島に舟で黒耀石を採りに行き来していますから。世界の学界には知られてないんですね~。

Anthropologist group suggests first humans to the Americas arrived via the kelp highway

November 3, 2017 by Bob Yirka report

Recent archaeological finds show that pre-Clovis people arrived in the Americas before 13,500 years ago, likely via a coastal route along the Pacific Coast. Higher sea levels make finding direct evidence difficult. Credit: (c) J. YOU AND N. …more

(Phys.org)—A team of anthropologists from several institutions in the U.S. has offered a Perspective piece in the journal Science outlining current theories regarding the first humans to populate the Americas. In their paper, they scrap the conventional view that Clovis people making their way across a Bering land bridge were the first to arrive in the Americas—more recent evidence suggests others arrived far earlier, likely using boats to travel just offshore.

As the authors note, for most of the last century, the accepted theory of humans’ first arrival was via the land bridge in what is now the Bering Strait—at the time, sea levels would have been much lower. Those early settlers, named the Clovis people, were theorized to have traveled down a central ice-free corridor into what is now the U.S. approximately 13,500 years ago. But, as the authors also note, evidence since the late 1980s has shown that there were people living in parts of the Americas long before the time of the Clovis migration. Archaeological evidence of people living on islands off of Asia and on the North and South American coasts (some as far south as Chile) has been found going as far back as 14,000 to 18,000 years ago. Evidence has also been found of people living in the North American interior as far back as 16,000 years ago.

All this new evidence, the authors report, has caused most experts in the field to abandon the idea of the Clovis people as the first to arrive. Most now believe that the first people to arrive did so by boat rather than walking, and they did it by following the coasts, not through the interior. This would have been possible, the authors note, because of what has come to be known as the kelp highway—kelp forests growing just offshore. All that kelp, it has been noted, would have provided a rich habitat for sea creatures upon which hearty travelers could feast.

The authors conclude by noting that too little research has been done offshore—the early travelers would have been residing mostly on land that is now covered by the sea due to higher worldwide ocean levels. If the scientific community truly wants to learn more about human migration to the Americas, they suggest, more work needs to be done offshore.

Explore further: New evidence — Clovis people not first to populate North America

More information: Todd J. Braje et al. Finding the first Americans, Science (2017). DOI: 10.1126/science.aao5473

Summary
For much of the 20th century, most archaeologists believed humans first colonized the Americas ∼13,500 years ago via an overland route that crossed Beringia and followed a long and narrow, mostly ice-free corridor to the vast plains of central North America. There, Clovis people and their descendants hunted large game and spread rapidly through the New World. Twentieth-century discoveries of distinctive Clovis artifacts throughout North America, some associated with mammoth or mastodon kill sites, supported this “Clovis-first” model. North America’s coastlines and their rich marine, estuarine, riverine, and terrestrial ecosystems were peripheral to the story of how and when the Americas were first settled by humans. Recent work along the Pacific coastlines of North and South America has revealed that these environments were settled early and continuously provided a rich diversity of subsistence options and technological resources for New World hunter-gatherers.

Journal reference: Science

Read more at: https://phys.org/news/2017-11-anthropologist-group-humans-americas-kelp.html#jCp

(了)

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