Everything about The Clovis Culture totally explained
The
Clovis culture (sometimes referred to as the
Llano culture) is a
prehistoric Paleoindian culture that first appears in the
archaeological record of
North America around 11,500 rcbp
radiocarbon years ago, at the end of the
last glacial period. Archaeologists' best guess at present suggests this is equal to roughly 13,000 calendar years ago. The Clovis culture is thought to have lasted from between 200 and 800 years, depending on the source consulted, with an average estimate of around 500 years, starting about 13,000 years ago. The Clovis culture was replaced by several more localized regional cultures at the time of the
Younger Dryas cold climate period. Immediately post-Clovis cultures include the
Folsom tradition, Gainey, Suwannee-Simpson, Plainview-Goshen,
Cumberland point, and Redstone. Each of these is commonly thought to derive directly from Clovis, in some cases apparently differing only in the length of the fluting on their projectile points. Although this is generally held to be the result of normal cultural change through time, numerous other reasons have been suggested to be the driving force for the observed changes in the archaeological record such as an extraterrestrial impact event or post glacial climate change with numerous extinctions.
The Clovis people, one of the several distinct
Paleoindian groups mentioned above, were regarded as the first human inhabitants of the
New World since the discovery of several Clovis sites in western North America in the 1930s. Clovis people were thought to be the ancestors of all the indigenous cultures of North and
South America. However, this view has been contested over the last thirty years by several archaeological discoveries, including sites like
Cactus Hill in
Virginia,
Paisley Caves in the
Summer Lake Basin of
Oregon,
Meadowcroft Rockshelter in
Pennsylvania, and
Monte Verde,
Chile.
Description
The culture was originally named for a small number of artifacts found in 1936 and 1937 at
Blackwater Draw Locality #1, near
Clovis, New Mexico. People began collecting artifacts at this site in the late 1920s but artifacts and animal remains that hadn't moved since the Pleistocene were not recovered until 1936. The in situ finds of 1936 and 1937 included stone Clovis points, two long bone points with impact damage, stone blades, a portion of a Clovis blade core, and several cutting tools made on stone flakes. Clovis sites have since been identified throughout much, but not all, of the contiguous
United States, as well as
Mexico and
Central America, and even into Northern South America.
A hallmark of the toolkit associated with the Clovis culture is the distinctively-shaped fluted rock
spear point, known as the
Clovis point. The Clovis point is
bifacial and typically fluted on both sides. Archaeologists don't agree on whether the widespread presence of these artifacts indicates the proliferation of a single people, or the adoption of a superior technology by diverse population groups. It is generally accepted that Clovis people hunted
mammoth as Clovis points have repeatedly been found in sites containing mammoth remains. Mammoth is only a small part of the Clovis diet;
extinct bison,
mastodon,
sloths,
tapir,
palaeolama,
horse and a host of smaller animals have also been found in Clovis sites where they were killed and eaten. In total, more than 125 species of plants and animals are known to have been used by Clovis people in the portion of the Western Hemisphere they inhabited. Clovis sites are known from most of North America, some parts of Central America, and even into northern South America in Venezuela (see Pearson and Ream 2005).
Disappearance of Clovis
The most commonly held perspective on the end of the Clovis culture is that a decline in the availability of megafauna, combined with an overall increase in population, led to local differentiation of lithic and cultural traditions across the Americas. However, it has also been argued by others that Clovis ended more abruptly.
Whether the Clovis culture drove the mammoth, and other species, to
extinction via overhunting — the so-called
Pleistocene overkill hypothesis — is still an open, and controversial, question. The greater likelihood is that a combination of climate change, human predation, disease, and additional pressures from newly arrived herbivores (competition) and carnivores (predation) and isolation made it impossible for them to reproduce and survive. It has also been hypothesized that the Clovis culture saw its decline in the wake of the
Younger Dryas cold phase. This 'cold shock' lasting roughly 1,500 years affected many parts of the world, including North America. It appears to have been triggered by a vast meltwater lake —
Lake Agassiz — emptying into the North Atlantic, disrupting the
thermohaline circulation. Some have suggested the Younger Dryas began when an extraterrestrial object exploded in Earth's atmosphere above North America's
Great Lakes region about 12,900 years ago, though this hypothesis isn't universally accepted. An apparent association of the last Clovis artifacts and an organic stratigraphic layer laid down during the Younger Dryas has been noted:
Discovery
A cowboy and former slave, George McJunkin, found an
Ancient Bison (an extinct relative of the
American Bison) skeleton with an associated
Folsom point in 1908 after a massive flood. It was first excavated in
1926, near
Folsom, New Mexico under the direction of Harold Cook and Jesse Figgins.
In
1929, 19-year-old
James Ridgley Whiteman, discovered the Clovis Man Site in the Blackwater Draw in Eastern
New Mexico.
Despite earlier legitimate Paleoindian discoveries, the best understood evidence of the Clovis tool complex was excavated in
1932-1937 in
Clovis, New Mexico, by a crew under the direction of Edgar Billings Howard from the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences/University of Pennsylvania. Howard's crew left their excavation in
Burnet Cave, New Mexico (truly the first professionally excavated Clovis site) in August and visited Whiteman and his Blackwater Draw site. In November, Howard was back at Blackwater Draw to investigate additional finds by Whiteman.
There may be earlier reports of the Paleoindian layers of the dig in Burnet Cave, but it seems likely that the first report of professional work at a Clovis site concerns the Blackwater Draw site in the November 25, 1932 issue of Science News. This directly contradicts statements by some authors (Haynes 2002:56 The Early Settlement of North America) that Dent, Colorado was the first excavated Clovis site. The Dent Site, in
Weld County, Colorado, was simply a fossil mammoth excavation in 1932. The first Dent Clovis point was found July 7, 1933. The in situ Clovis point from Burnet Cave was excavated in late August, 1931 and E. B. Howard brought it to the 3rd Pecos Conference and showed it around (see Woodbury 1983).
Clovis First
The predominant hypothesis (known as "Clovis First") among archaeologists in the latter half of the 20th century was that the Clovis people were the first inhabitants of the Americas. The primary support for this was that no solid evidence of pre-Clovis human inhabitation had been found. According to the standard accepted theory, the Clovis people crossed the
Beringia land bridge over the
Bering Strait from
Siberia to
Alaska during the period of lowered sea levels during the ice age, then made their way southward through an ice-free corridor east of the
Rocky Mountains in present-day western
Canada as the
glaciers retreated.
Alternative hypotheses
Archaeologists have long debated the possible existence of a culture older than Clovis in North and South America.
Predecessors of the Clovis people may have migrated south along the North American coastline. According to researchers Michael Waters and Thomas Stafford of
Texas A&M University, new radiocarbon dates place Clovis remains from the continental United States in a shorter time window (13,050 to 12,800 years ago), while radiocarbon dating of the Monte Verde site in Chile place Clovis like culture there as early as 13,500 years ago and remains found at the
Channel Islands of California place coastal Paleoindians there 12,500 years ago. This suggests that the Paleoindian migration could have spread more quickly along the coastline south, and that populations that settled along that route could have then began migrations eastward into the continent.
In
2004, worked stone tools were found at
Topper in
South Carolina, that have been dated by
radiocarbon techniques to 50,000 years ago, although there's significant dispute regarding these dates.. A more substantiated claim is that of
Paisley Caves, where rigorous carbon-14 and genetic testing appears to indicate that humans related to modern Native Americans were present in the caves over 1000 14C years before the earliest evidence of Clovis.
The
Tlapacoya site on the shore of the former
Lake Chalco reveals bones, hearths,
middens, and a
curved obsidian blade, presumed to date to over 21,700 years
BP, although the dating has been disputed.
Coastal migration route
Recent studies of the
mitochondrial DNA of
First Nations/
Native Americans suggest that the people of the New World may have diverged genetically from Siberians as early as 20,000 years ago, far earlier than the standard theory would suggest. According to one alternative theory, the
Pacific coast of North America may have been free of ice such as to allow the first peoples in North America to come down this route prior to the formation of the ice-free corridor in the continental interior. No solid evidence has yet been found to support this hypothesis except that genetic analysis of coastal marine life indicates diverse fauna persisting in refugia throughout the Pleistocene ice ages along the coasts of Alaska and British Columbia; these refugia include common food sources of coastal aboriginal peoples, suggesting that a migration along the coastline was feasible at the time.
Solutrean hypothesis
The controversial
Solutrean hypothesis proposed in
1999 by Smithsonian archaeologist
Dennis Stanford and colleague
Bruce Bradley (Stanford and Bradley 2002), suggests that the Clovis people could have inherited technology from the
Solutrean people who lived in southern Europe 21,000-15,000 years ago, and who created the first
Stone Age artwork in present-day southern
France. The link is suggested by the similarity in technology between the projectile points of the Solutreans and those of the Clovis people. Such a theory would require that the Solutreans crossed via the edge of the pack ice in the
North Atlantic Ocean that then extended to the Atlantic coast of France. They could have done this using survival skills similar to those of the modern
Inuit people. Supporters of this hypothesis suggest that stone tools found at
Cactus Hill (an early American site in
Virginia), that are knapped in a style between Clovis and Solutrean. Other scholars such as Emerson F. Greenman and Remy Cottevieille-Giraudet have also suggested a Northern Atlantic point of entry, citing toolmaking similarities between Clovis and Solutrean-era artifacts.
Mitochondrial DNA analysis (see Map in
Single-origin hypothesis) has found that some members of some native North American tribes have a maternal ancestry (called
haplogroup X) (Schurr 2000) linked to the maternal ancestors of some present day individuals in western Asia and Europe, albeit distantly.
University of New Mexico anthropologist Lawrence G. Straus, a primary critic of the Solutrean hypothesis, points to the theoretical difficulty of the ocean crossing, a lack of Solutrean-specific features in pre-Clovis artifacts, as well as the lack of art (such as that found at
Lascaux in France) among the Clovis people, as major deficiencies in the Solutrean hypothesis. The 3,000 to 5,000 radiocarbon year gap between the Solutrean period of France and Spain and the Clovis of the New World also makes such a connection problematic (Straus 2000). In response, defenders of the hypothesis state that the Solutreans introduced a tool-making innovation and not necessarily cultural or artistic practices.
Recent genetic studies
An article in the
American Journal of Human Genetics states "Here we show, by using 86 complete mitochondrial genomes, that all Native American
haplogroups, including
haplogroup X, were part of a single founding population, thereby refuting multiple-migration models." The study also argues for a Beringian isolation and subsequent coastal migration.
Other possible pre-Clovis sites
In approximate reverse chronological order:
The Big Eddy Site in southwestern Missouri contains several claimed pre-Clovis artifacts or geofacts. In situ artifacts have been found in this well-stratified site in association with charcoal. Five different samples have been AMS dated to between 11,300 to 12,675 BP (Before Present).
Monte Verde II, a site in Chile, was occupied from 11,800 to 12,000 to years BP.
Taima Taima, Venezuela has cultural material very similar to Monte Verde II, dating to 12,000 years BP.
A cut mastodon tusk found at Page-Ladson, Jefferson County, Florida on the Aucilla River has been dated to 12,300 years BP near a few in situ artifacts of similar age.
The Schaefer and Hebior mammoth sites in Kenosha County, Wisconsin indicate exploitation of this animal by humans. The Schaefer Mammoth site has over 13 highly purified collagen AMS dates and 17 dates on associated wood dating it to 12,300-12,500 radiocarbon years before the present. Hebior has two AMS dates in the same range. Both animals show conclusive butchering marks and associated non-diagnostic tools.
A site in Walker, Minnesota with stone tools, alleged to be from 13,000 to 15,000 years old based on surrounding geology, was discovered in 2006.
Human coprolites have been found in a cave in Oregon, carbon dated at 14,300 years ago. Genetic analysis revealed that the coprolites contained mtDNA haplogroups A2 and B2, two of the five major Native American mtDNA haplogroups.
The Mud Lake site, in Kenosha County, Wisconsin consists of the foreleg of a juvenile mammoth recovered in the 1930s. Over 100 stone tool butchering marks are found on the bones. Several purified collegen AMS dates show the animal to be 13,450 rcybp with a range of plus or minus 1,500 rcybp variance.
Meadowcroft Rockshelter in southwestern Pennsylvania, excavated 1973-78, with evidence of occupancy dating back from 16,000 to 19,000 years ago.
Cactus Hill in southern Virginia, with artifacts such as unfluted bifacial stone tools with dates ranging from c. 15,000 to 17,000 years ago.Further Information
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