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An Ancient Dog Bone Could Be Evidence of the Route Humans Took to North America


An Ancient Dog Bone Could Be Evidence of the Route Humans Took to North America
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charlotte lindqvistcoastal migrationdog breedsdogsdomesticated animalsenvironmentlast glacial maximumnative american dogssettlement of the americassled dogsled dog breeds
The canine bone fragment, found in Southeast Alaska. (Image: Douglas Levere/University at Buffalo)
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A fragment of 10,000-year-old dog bone found along the Alaskan coast could be the oldest evidence of domesticated dogs in North America, and potential evidence of a coastal route taken by the first people to cross into North America from Eurasia. ....

United States , United Kingdom , Timothy Heaton , Charlotte Lindqvist , Silva Coelho , Bob Wilder University At Buffalo , Douglas Levere University At Buffalo , Proceedings Of The Royal Society , University At Buffalo Ph , University Of South Dakota , University At Buffalo , North America , Coastal Migration Theory , Cordilleran Ice Sheet , Kelp Highway Hypothesis , Calvert Island , Royal Society , Evidence Suggests Dogs Reached North America , Ice Age , Wrangell Island , South Dakota , Buffalo Phd , Flavio Augusto , North Pacific , Coastal Migration , European American ,

Dog bone fragment dating back 10,150 years is discovered in Alaska


Dog bone fragment dating back 10,150 years is discovered in Alaska
Joe Pinkstone For Mailonline
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The oldest dog remains ever found in the Americas are 10,150 years old and prove canines were with humans when the land was first colonised 6,000 years before.  
Analysis of a chunk of dog femur, which was found in southern Alaska, reveals the animal was a descendant of Siberian dogs.
Scientists believe these ancient dogs accompanied the first humans to the Americas at the end of the last Ice Age when glaciers were in retreat. 
The finding backs up the theory that people migrated into what is today Alaska from eastern Russia by following a route along the coast as the Bering Strait thawed.  ....

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