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It Looks Like America's First People Were Island Hoppers


America’s First People Migrated East From Island to Island
For as long as science has existed researchers have debated, and often argued, as to when, where, and how America’s first people arrived on the continent and moved south from there to South America .
The most conventional theory was that the first migrants who populated the North American continent arrived across an ancient land bridge from Asia after the enormous Cordilleran and Laurentide ice sheets receded. This event created a navigable corridor nearly 1,000 miles (1,600 km) long that emerged east of the Rocky Mountains in present-day Canada.
Since the early 1930s, the Clovis-first theory has maintained the first Asians came into the Americas via an ice-free corridor about 13,000 BC. However, over the last 20 years several major archaeological sites have been dated to thousands of years before the Clovis people arrived in North America. ....

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First Hand Reports Of Early Encounters With Ancient American Cultures


Early Explorers: Ferdinand Magellan & Antonio Pigafetta
Portuguese-born, Spanish-crown-commissioned captain  Ferdinand Magellan  may be the most renowned of all early explorers. His circumnavigation of the globe was the first in recorded history and is arguably the greatest sea voyage in the  Age of Discovery . Between 1519 and 1522 AD the intrepid crew of the carrack, aptly named “The Victoria,” rounded the southern tip of South America. They named this land 
Patagones, the Spanish 
pata meaning foot hence this name means “the land of the bigfeet.” According to the official chronicles, painstakingly recorded by Antonio Pigafetta, as they approached the shore of this strange land, they witnessed a giant, naked man dancing and anointing himself with powder. A crew member was sent ashore to make contact and did so by imitating the giant’s gestures.  ....

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Teeth Offer Clues to Two Ancient Economies in Peru - Archaeology Magazine


Teeth Offer Clues to Two Ancient Economies in Peru
Thursday, December 17, 2020
NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE According to a statement released by Vanderbilt University, people living some 6,000 years ago at Huaca Prieta, a site near the shores of northern Peru, and people living at Paredones, about a half mile inland, consumed distinct diets. Researchers Tiffiny Tung, Larisa DeSantis, Tom Dillehay, and Rebeca Webb Wilson analyzed carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios from the collagen extracted from the teeth of 21 individuals buried at Huaca Prieta and nine individuals from Paredones. The study suggests that the people at Huaca Prieta ate a marine-based diet, while people at Paredones ate mostly meat and maize. Wear from eating maize ground with stones can be seen on teeth from Paredones individuals, DeSantis added. Employing varying food sources encouraged the development of specialized technologies and methods of distribution. But, the researchers explained, these difference ....

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Analysis of ancient teeth reveal clues about how sociopolitical systems grow

Analysis of ancient teeth reveal clues about how sociopolitical systems grow
miragenews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from miragenews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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