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Are Venetian blue beads found in the Alaskan tundra the first US import from Europe?


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Glass beads the size of blueberries found by archaeologists in a Brooks Range house-pit might be the first European item ever to arrive in North America, predating the arrival of Columbus by a few decades.
Made in Venice, Italy, the tiny blue beads might have traveled more than 10,000 miles in the skin pockets of aboriginal adventurers to reach Bering Strait. There, someone ferried them across the ocean to Alaska.
At least 10 of the beads survived a few centuries in the cold dirt of three locations in northern Alaska. Archaeologists recently unraveled the mystery of the beads in a paper published in the journal American Antiquity. ....

Brooks Range , United States , Continental Divide , Adriatic Sea , Oceans General , Bering Strait , William Irving , Michael Kunz , Arctic Ocean , Bering Sea , Mike Kunz , University Of Wisconsin , Ua Museum Of The , Bureau Of Land Management , North America , Land Management , Punyik Point , Robin Mills , Native American , Peter Minuit , Manhattan Island , New World , Precolumbian Presence , Venetian Glass Trade Beads , Arctic Alaska , American Antiquity ,