A chopping tool of the early Soan culture, in northwestern
India. (After Paterson, 1942.)
Yet—another puzzle—hand axes have been found in
central and southern Texas, and in Renaud’s Black’s
Fork culture of Wyoming, without traces of Folsom or
Eden. Can these hand axes, like the Aurignacian and
Magdalenian traits of which Nelson and Harrington
write, represent an earlier migration than Sandia and
Folsom? This is most problematical.
Spinden’s Neolithic Blockade
All this is patently absurd
to the dean of American archaeologists, Herbert
J. Spinden. If tools in the New World resemble the Aurignacian
or the Solutrean, it is an accident—perhaps
an accident of psychic unity. He is against all talk of
paleolithic man in the Americas on the late edge of
the Great Ice Age. In the face of facts presented by
Russian and American glacialists, he maintains that
“eastern Siberia was rather heavily glaciated.”[15] He
believes that certain Asiatic peoples with a sudden
urge for travel first appeared at the Siberian-Alaskan
portal about 2500 B.C.[16] They could not have been
men of the Old Stone Age because, he asserts, we have
found nothing in Siberia that approaches the paleolithic;
indeed, we have found no paleolithic tools north
of 54° in England, of 53° in Siberia, or of 43° on
the Sea of Japan, while “the portal to America for
man and beast lies at 67° north latitude.” We have,
then, “a no-proof barrier zone a thousand miles deep
extending clear across the Old World.”[17] This “rules
out invasion of America until relatively modern times
because it shows that a wide zone of the Old World,
blocking the road to America, was itself unused by
man until long after the last continental ice sheet
... had disappeared.”[18] Obviously, Spinden’s argument
is not based on evidence in the Americas, but
rather on lack of evidence in little studied Siberia.
He ignores the presence of paleolithic tools in northern
Manchuria together with the fossils of extinct
mammals.[19] He concedes that even in the regions of
“the most ancient civilization” in the Old World there
is no trace of such high technical skill in flint chipping
as the Folsom “before the fourth millennium before
Christ.” But—appearing to ignore the geological
evidence connected with Sandia, Folsom, Clovis, Abilene,
and Lake Mohave—he interprets this as meaning
that man cannot have reached the Southwest before
the golden age of Ur. He speaks of “the lost cause
of paleolithic man in America.” He accepts Solutrean
flint work as paleolithic, but not Folsom or Eden. “Now,
even if we admit that Folsom man hunted the mammoth,
we must place that sporting event not earlier
than 2000 B.C.”[20]
Was the First Migration Interglacial?
As we think we
have shown in Chapter 8, we can never hope to date
early man at all exactly by means of elephants or bison
or any other extinct mammal. Even if science were able
to settle the time of the great extinction, we should
be only a little better off. We could say that man was
in the New World at that time; but this would give
us only an upper date, not a lower one. Man may have
been here for tens of thousands of years before those
mammals died off. A few scientists think he was.
The great glaciations presented early man with an
opportunity and a difficulty; they threw a land-bridge
across Bering Strait, but, for long periods of time, they
also laid a barrier of ice and snow across his path to
the south. Look at the map at the top of page 26 and
you will see that about 65,000 years ago the barrier covered
the whole depth of Canada. This would have
meant a trip of some 2,000 miles across ice. For a time,
as we have explained earlier, a corridor opened up for
his passage. By 18,000 years ago, however, it had
closed again. To be sure, there was a tongue of ice-free
land that ran southward across part of Canada and
shortened the journey over snow and ice to a thousand
miles; but the invader would have had to be extremely
lucky to hit the upper end of the open country. Far
more important, none of the animals that he hunted,
and that therefore led him on his southward journey,
would have taken that thousand-mile trek across a
frozen, foodless waste. If early man came in the time
of the corridor, his trip would not have been too difficult
and he would have found game along the way. At
any period he could have come by boat or possibly
afoot along the Pacific coast. But, no matter how he
came, he would have faced almost insuperable difficulties
during the first quarter and the third quarter of
the last glaciation.
This fact affects different students differently. Antevs,
feeling that man must have come after the ice
began to melt, gives our migrant not much over 15,000
years in the New World. If man arrived earlier, he
feels, it must have been when the corridor opened
through the ice some 40,000 years ago, and he sees no
evidence for so early a migration.[21] Kirk Bryan disagrees.
Accepting the theory that the last glaciation
waxed and waned three times, he places the first invasion
by man in the second of these wanings, or inter-stadials,
just before the final burgeoning of the ice 12,000
years ago.[22] Sauer goes further. He suggests that
the shores of western Siberia may have been inhabited
during the second interglacial, and that during the
third glaciation, preceding the Wisconsin, “a first
colonization of the New World is not improbable.”[23]
Erwin H. Barbour and C. Bertrand Schultz say that
“evidence is constantly accumulating to show that man
actually had reached North America before the last
glacial advance.”[24] George F. Carter believes that artifacts
in the glacial gravels of Trenton and Lake Lahontan,
spear points with musk oxen in New Mexico, the
Vero skull partnered in Florida with flora and fauna
more appropriate to Pennsylvania, stone implements
deeply buried under aged soil profiles, all argue that
man was in North America during the last glaciation.
He does not believe that primitive hunters—let alone
the Cochise food gatherers—would have survived Arctic
travel at the height of the glaciations. He thinks that
Folsom man came through the ice-free corridor of
40,000 years ago, and that another body of immigrants
came during the last of the three great interglacials,
which means about 100,000 years ago.[25]
Interglacial migration finds support from Albrecht
Penck, the German glacialist who with Eduard Brückner
established the four great glaciations of central Europe.
Penck gives two reasons for believing that man
came to the Americas in the last interglacial. Both
theories lie outside his field of special knowledge.
First, Penck doubts that man had time enough after
the glaciers melted to adapt himself to the seven or
eight climates in which he lived and labored in 1492.
In the 10,000 years since the Wisconsin glaciation, people
of an arctic habitat could not possibly have adjusted
their physical nature so perfectly “first to forests,
then to steppes and deserts in temperate zones, then
to steaming tropical forests and to the plateaus of the
tropics, the steppes and deserts of the southern hemisphere,
and finally to the damp, cool south.”
Penck’s second reason for supporting interglacial migration
has to do with the marked changes of climate
that took pace during the Great Ice Age. As the glaciers
grew and moved farther and farther south, the
temperature belts of Canada and the United States
moved south with them. As these belts moved, vegetation
altered. Tundra crept to the south, pursuing
grasslands and forest. Deserts and jungle moved before
them. When the glaciers began to melt, this movement
went into reverse. Penck feels that primitive man
migrates easily only within a single climatic zone. Tundra
folk avoid forests; forest folk avoid tundra. Man
moves with the climate, not against it; a New Yorker
goes to Florida in the winter, not the summer. Early
man would not have traveled southward through
Canada and the United States while the climate was
moving northward with the melting of the ice. On the
contrary, man would have moved southward only as
the glaciers grew and the temperature belts moved
southward. When the glaciers melted he would have
tended to move northward again. Thus man must have
entered the New World toward the end of an interglacial,
and gone southward with the weather. After
that, shifts in the climate would have distributed man
all over the Americas. “Under the influence of a number
of alternating glacial and interglacial periods, we
can understand the gradual settlement, but not solely
on the assumption of one glacial migration.” With the
end of the last glaciers men spread north and south
once more, and even drifted back to Asia.[26] Penck’s
argument becomes all the stronger if we grant that
early man followed the animals he killed for food and
animals followed the movements of the vegetation on
which they fed.
Further, the presence of early man close to the time
and even the edge of the retreating glaciers—if the
evidence is read aright—argues that he must have arrived
in North America during one of those retreats
of the Wisconsin glaciation which preceded its final
growth and decline.
Geological Evidence and the Pluvials
All this is speculation,
of course—reasoned speculation, but no more
than that. Are we on firmer ground when we deal with
geological evidence? Perhaps, yet there is plenty of
room for controversy.
The New World has very few sites in which artifacts
or human bones have been found in glacial gravels. A
noted one, near Trenton, New Jersey, has been under
dispute for eighty years. The Lake Lahontan site and
its blade have been too much neglected. There are,
however, a number of places where skulls or artifacts
have been found linked to other strata than gravels
that suggest a relationship with glacial activity.
In these sites we find human skulls or artifacts together
with signs of much rainfall or of large lakes and
rivers which now have no more existence than the
mammoth. The evidence of man lay undisturbed beneath
sterile layers of material deposited by water. A
typical case is Sandia Cave. Here Folsom points were
found beneath a floor of a stalagmitic limestone
created by so heavy a seepage of calcium-charged water
that the stratum holding the Folsom material had
been partially consolidated. Below lies another sterile
layer—of yellow ocher earth, indicating a very moist
period and the presence of trees which would provide
certain chemical agents and which are no more common
now in this arid area than are heavy, continuous
rains. Another example of mans association with a
much moister time than the present comes from the
cave in Brazil where the Confins skull was found. The
skull lay under six feet of alluvial soil carried in by water.
Later a layer of stalagmitic limestone sealed the
sepulcher. It may be presumed that artifacts found
on the shore or in the clay of Lake Cochise, Lake Mohave,
and Pinto Basin—now dry and gone—must have
been made during a time of great waters.
What do such evidences of unusual moisture mean?
They mean that the men of these sites lived before or
during a period of heavy rainfall not known there for
at least the last 9000 years. Beyond that bare fact,
debate begins. Walter, Cathoud, and Mattos, who described
the Brazilian find, took a most conservative attitude
and wrote that Confins man lived “a few thousands
of years ago.”[27] Bryan, who studied Sandia Cave,
placed the later wet period after the end of Pleistocene,
or Great Ice Age, and the first wet period—along with
the Sandia points—in the Late glacial.[28]
Glacial experts call a period of unusual and widespread
rains a pluvial. They believe that the growth of
the glaciers was accompanied by pluvials, and some
maintain that pluvials also marked the melting of the
ice. Antevs lists a great pluvial—the Bonneville—which
formed Lake Bonneville and Lake Lahontan during
the first maximum of the last, or Wisconsin, glaciation,
65,000 years ago. He places another period of great
moisture, the Provo Pluvial, at the last glacial maximum,
about 12,000 years ago, and believes it was all
but spent 7,000 to 9,000 years ago.[29] Thus he dates
Lake Mohave and its early artifacts about 9,000 years
ago. His point is that annual precipitation is about the
same throughout the globe, but that the pluvials shift
at various times. “It is essentially the location of the
rainfall that changes.”[30]
All authorities do not agree that annual rainfall is
constant, and some deny Antev’s late date for the last
pluvial. Sauer writes, “I know of no climatologic basis
for postulating a postglacial pluvial period,” either in
New Mexico or the Lake Mohave and Pinto Basin area
of southern California.[31] Some European authorities
believe that pluvials are entirely glacial. M. C. Burkitt,
for example, cites the fact that the same type of tools
is found in Africa during pluvials as in Europe during
glacials.[32] According to Simpson’s theory of the formation
of the glaciers, rainfall increased enormously during
two periods of the Great Ice Age; the last pluvial
was at its height during the building up of the Würm-Wisconsin
ice sheets. (See page 58.) The pluvials
make a rather good case for early man in the New
World during the last glaciation.
In Sum
Ten years ago, we knew that men in America
had once killed, skinned, and eaten animals now extinct,
for we had found their weapons and a few of
their bones mingled with the fossils of mammals long
extinct. We could not question the association, because
it often involved the remains of campfires; spear points
and bones might be moved about in the course of time,
but not fragile heaps of charcoal. We knew, too, that
the bones and tools of man had been found sealed
away by the chemistry of the ages. But when we tried
to date man securely by animals that were dead and
gone, or by the earths that lay above him, we began to
guess. The guesses of conservative glacialists gave him
at least 15,000 years in the New World. Other speculations—supported
by rather plausible evidence as well
as not implausible theory—placed him still earlier.
Now, at last, through the miraculous time clock of radiocarbon,
we know that man was here before the chill
of the last Ice Age settled upon the land.
REFERENCES IN THE TEXT
Chapter 1
[1]Alfred L. Kroeber, “Native American Population,”
American
Anthropologist, 36:24 (1934). Herbert J. Spinden, “The
Population of Ancient America,”
Smithsonian Institution Annual
Report for 1929 (1930), 470.
[2]Nels C. Nelson, “The Antiquity of Man in America in the
Light of Archaeology,” in
The American Aborigines, ed.
Diamond Jenness (1933), 97.
[3]Alfred L. Kroeber,
Anthropology (1923), 98.
[4]Franz Boas, “Relationships Between Northwest America and
Northeast Asia,” in
The American Aborigines, 367-368.
[5]John P. Harrington, personal communication, 1947, and
“Southern Peripheral Athapaskawan Origins, Divisions, and
Migrations,”
Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, 100:504 (1940).
[6]Edgar B. Howard, “An Outline of the Problem of Man’s
Antiquity in North America,”
American Anthropologist,
38:398 (1936).
[7]W. W. Howells, “The Origins of the American Indian Race
Types,”
The Maya and Their Neighbors (1940), 5.
[8]Albrecht Penck, “Wann kamen die Indianer nach Nordamerika?”
Proceedings, 23rd International Congress of Americanists
(1930), 23-30.
[9]Kroeber,
Anthropology, 336-339.
[10]Clark Wissler, “Ethnological Diversity in America and Its
Significance,” in
The American Aborigines, 188.
Chapter 2
[1]Nels C. Nelson, “The Antiquity of Man in America in the
Light of Archaeology,” in
The American Aborigines (1933),
89.
[2]Padre Joseph de Acosta,
The Natural and Moral History of
the Indies (transl. Edward Grimston, 1604), ed. Clements
R. Markham (1880), 1:45, 57.
[3]Edward Brerewood,
Enquiries Touching the Diversity of
Languages, and Religions, Through the Chief Parts of the
World (1622—1st ed., 1614), 96, 97.
[4]Fray Gregorio García,
Origen de los Indios de el Nuevo
Mundo (1719—1st ed., 1607), 315.
[5]Voltaire,
La Philosophie de l’Histoire (1765), 46.
[6]Alexander von Humboldt,
Political Essay on the Kingdom
of New Spain (1822), 153, 155.
[7]Reginald A. Daly,
The Changing World of the Ice Age
(1934), 47, 182. Ernst Antevs,
The Last Glaciation (American
Geographical Society Research Series, No. 17, 1928),
81. Richard F. Flint,
Glacial Geology and the Pleistocene
Epoch (1947), 432-433.
[8]Aleš Hrdlička, “The Coming of Man from Asia in the Light
of Recent Discoveries,”
Proceedings, American Philosophical
Society, 71:399 (1932).
[9]Richard F. Flint and H. G. Dorsey, “Glaciation in Siberia,”
Bulletin, Geological Society of America, 56:98
(1945).
[10]James W. Gidley, “Paleontological Evidence Bearing on
the Problem of the Origin of the American Aborigines,”
American Anthropologist, 14:22 (1912).
[11]Hrdlička,
op. cit., 398.
[12]Frank Hibben, “Evidence of Early Man in Alaska,”
American
Antiquity, 8:254-259 (1943). Hrdlička,
op. cit., 399.
[13]Philip S. Smith, “Certain Relations Between Northwestern
America and Northeastern Asia,” in
Early Man, ed. G. G.
MacCurdy (1937), 87.
[14]Hibben,
op. cit., 255-257.
[15]Frederick Johnson, “An Archaeological Survey Along the
Alaska Highway, 1944,”
American Antiquity, 11:183-186
(1946).
[16]Douglas Leechman, “Prehistoric Migration Routes Through
the Yukon,”
Canadian Historical Review, 27:383-390
(1946).
[17]Ernst Antevs, “Climate and Early Man in North America,”
in
Early Man, 125-126.
[18]M. R. Harrington,
Gypsum Cave, Nevada (Southwest Museum
Papers, No. 8, 1933), 190.
[19]Ellsworth Huntington,
The Red Man’s Continent: A Chronicle
of Aboriginal America (1919), 31-3.
[20]Stansbury Hagar, “The Bearing of Astronomy on the Subject,”
American Anthropologist, 14:43-48 (1912).
Chapter 3
[1]W. C. McKern, “An Hypothesis for the Asiatic Origin of
the Woodland Culture,”
American Antiquity, 3:138-143
(1937). Georg Neumann, “The Migration and the Origin
of the Woodland Culture,”
Proceedings, Indiana Academy
of Science, 54:41-43 (1945).
[2]Désiré Charnay,
Ancient Cities of the New World (1887),
174-175. Gordon F. Ekholm, “Wheeled Toys in Mexico,”
American Antiquity, 11:222-228 (1946). Robert H. Lister,
“Additional Evidence of Wheeled Toys in Mexico,”
American
Antiquity, 12:184-185 (1947).
[3]Erland Nordenskiöld,
The Copper and Bronze Ages in South
America (Comparative Ethnographical Studies, No. 4,
1921), 156, 157.
[4]Earnest A. Hooton,
Apes, Men, and Morons (1937), 51.
[5]T. A. Rickard, “The Nomenclature of Archaeology,”
American
Journal of Archaeology, 48:1 (1944).
[6]V. Gordon Childe, “Changing Methods and Aims in Prehistory,”
Proceedings, Prehistoric Society, 1935, 7.
[7]Rickard,
op. cit., 12.
[8]George R. Stewart,
Man: An Autobiography (1946), 29.
[9]John Crawfurd, “On the Supposed Stone, Bronze, and Iron
Ages of Society,”
Anthropological Review, 2:313 (1864).
[10]Waldemar Bogoras, “The Chukchee,”
Jessup North Pacific
Expedition, 7:209 (1904).
[11]See, respectively, William Coxe,
Account of the Russian Discoveries
(1780), 78; Edward H. Man,
On the Aboriginal
Inhabitants of the Andaman Islands (1883), 161; Leonard
Ray, “The Cave Dwellers of Perak,”
Journal, Anthropological
Institute, 26:46. (1887); and
Expeditions into the Valley of
the Amazon, transl. Edward Markham (1859), 80-83.
[12]Rickard,
op. cit., 15-16.
[13]John Lubbock,
Prehistoric Times (1865), 2.
[14]Otto von Kotzebue,
A Voyage of Discovery into the South
Seas, (1821), 2:65.
[15]Rickard,
op. cit., 11.
[16]Nels C. Nelson, “The Antiquity of Man in America in the
Light of Archaeology,” in
The American Aborigines (1933),
117.
[17]V. Gordon Childe,
Man Makes Himself (1939), 96-97.
[19]L. S. B. Leakey,
The Stone Age Cultures of Kenya Colony
(1931), 103-104, pl. 11.
[20]E. B. Sayles,
An Archaeological Survey of Texas (Medallion
Papers, Gila Pueblo, no. 17, 1935), table 9. Wm. Duncan
Strong, “Finding the Tomb of a Warrior-God,”
National
Geographic Magazine, 91:459 (1947).
[21]Childe, “Changing Methods and Aims in Prehistory,”
Proceedings,
Prehistoric Society, 1935, 8.
[22]Seton Lloyd and Fuad Safar, “Tel Hassuna: Excavations by
the Iraq Government Directorate General of Antiquities, in
1943 and 1944,”
Journal of Near Eastern Studies, 4:255-289
(1945).
Chapter 4
[1]John Playfair,
Illustrations of the Huttonian Theory of the
Earth (1802), 388-389.
[2]A. Bernhardi, “Wie kamen die aus dem Norden stammenden
Felsbruchstücke und Geschiebe, welche man in
Norddeutschland und den benachbarten Ländern findet, an
ihre gegenwärtigen Fundorte?”
Jahrbuch für Mineralogie,
Geognosie, und Petrefaktenkunde, 3:257-267 (1832).
[3]Albrecht Penck and Eduard Brückner,
Die Alpen im
Eiszeitalter (1901-1909).
[4]Ernst Antevs,
Late Glacial Correlations and Ice Recession
in Manitoba (Canada Geological Survey, Memoir 168,
1931), 2, 33.
[5]Richard F. Flint, “Chronology of the Pleistocene Epoch,”
Quarterly Journal, Florida Academy of Sciences, 8:3-4
(1945).
[6]Ernst Antevs,
The Last Glaciation (American Geographical
Society, Research Series, No. 17, 1928), 74-82. R. A. Daly,
The Changing World of the Ice Age (1934), 46. Richard F.
Flint,
Glacial Geology and the Pleistocene Epoch (1947),
334-335.
[7]Eduard Brückner, “Postglaziale Klimaänderungen und
Klimaschwankungen im Bereich der Alpen,”
Die Veränderungen
des Klimas seit dem Maximum der letzten Eiszeit
(Stockholm, 1910), 108.
[8]Milutin Milankovitch, “O Rasporedu suneeve Radijacije na
Povrsini Zembljie” (On the Distribution of Solar Radiation
on the Surface of the Earth),
Glas Srpske K. Akad., 91:101-179
(1913), and “Neue Ergebnisse der astronomischen Theorie
der Klimaschwankungen,”
Bulletin, Royal Serbian Academy
of Science, 1938, p. 4.
[9]Frederick E. Zeuner,
The Pleistocene Period (1945), 167.
[10]Kirtley F. Mather,
Sons of the Earth (1930), 106.
[11]Zeuner,
op. cit., 161.
[12]Maurice Ewing and William L. Donn, “A Theory of Ice
Ages,”
Science, 123:1061-1066 (1956), and “A Theory of
Ice Ages II,”
Science, 127:1159-1162 (1958), and “Theory
of Ice Ages,”
Science, 129:464-465 (1959).
[13]George C. Simpson, “World Climate During the Quaternary
Period,”
Quarterly Journal, Royal Meteorological Society,
60:425-478 (1934), and “Ice Ages,”
Nature, 141:591-598
(1938)—reprinted in
Annual Report, Smithsonian Institution,
1938, 289-302.
[14]Zeuner,
op. cit., 163.
[16]A. Vayson de Pradenne,
Prehistory (1940), 84-85.
Chapter 5
[1]V. Gordon Childe,
Progress and Archaeology (1944), 5.
[2]John Frere, “Account of Flint Weapons Discovered at
Hoxne in Suffolk,”
Archaeologia, 13:204-205 (1807).
[3]William Buckland,
Reliquiae Diluvianae (1823), 82-98.
[4]Harold Peake, and H. J. Fleure,
Apes and Men (
The Corridors
of Time, Vol. 1, 1927), 84.
[5]Gabriel de Mortillet, “Essai d’une classification des cavernes
et des stations sous abri, fondée sur les produits de l’industrie
humaine,”
Comptes Rendus, Académie des Sciences,
68:553-555 (1869).
[6]Edith Plant,
Man’s Unwritten Past (1942), 29.
[7]W. B. Wright,
Tools and the Man (1939), 38.
[8]Robert J. Braidwood,
Prehistoric Men (1957), 65, 72.
[9]J. S. Weiner, K. P. Oakley and W. E. Le Gros Clark, “The
Solution of the Piltdown Problem,”
Bulletin of the British
Museum (Natural History) Geology, 2:141-146 (1953).
[10]General sources: W. E. Le Gros Clark,
The Fossil Evidence
for Human Evolution (1955); Marcellin Boule and Henri V.
Vallois,
Fossil Men (1957); William Howells,
Mankind in
the Making (1959).
[11]William L. Straus, Jr., “Swanscombe Man,”
Science, 123:410
(1956).
[12]Pei Wen-chung, “Giant Ape’s Jaw Bone Discovered in
China,”
American Anthropologist, 59:834-838 (1957); and
William L. Straus, Jr., “Jaw of Gigantopithecus,”
Science,
125:685 (1957).
[13]Boule and Vallois,
op. cit., 423-424; Howells,
op. cit., 179-181.
[14]Le Gros Clark,
op. cit., 113-161.
[15]Raymond A. Dart, “The Osteodontokeratic Culture of
Australopithecus prometheus,”
Memoir of the Transvaal
Museum, No. 10, 1957.
[16]L. S. B. Leakey, “The Discovery by L. S. B. Leakey of
Zinjanthropus boisei,”
Current Anthropology 1:76-77
(1960).
[17]Le Gros Clark,
op. cit., 114, 160.
[18]Helmut de Terra, “New Approach to the Problem of Man’s
Origin,”
Science, 124:1282-1285 (1956); William S. Straus,
Jr., “Oreopithecus bambolii,”
Science, 126:345-346 (1957).
[19]Willard F. Libby,
Radiocarbon Dating (1955).
[20]A. Haring and A. E. de Vries, “Radiocarbon Dating Up to
70,000 Years by Isotopic Enrichment,”
Science, 128:472-473
(1958).
[21]“Archeological Discoveries in Iraq,”
Science, 126:834-835
(1957).
[22]Henry F. Osborn,
Men of the Old Stone Age (1915), 351.
Nels C. Nelson, “Succession of Prehistoric Ages in Egypt
and in Europe” (chart), in Henry F. Osborn,
The Age of
Man (1944), 44. Kirtley F. Mather,
Sons of the Earth
(1930), 160.
[23]Frederick E. Zeuner,
Dating the Past (1946), 290.
[24]Hallam L. Movius, Jr., “Radiocarbon Dates and Upper
Palaeolithic Archaeology in Central and Western Europe,”
Current Anthropology, 1:357 (1960).
[25]Robert Braidwood, personal communication, 1946. Mather,
op. cit., 160-161. Peake and Fleure,
Hunters and Artists
(
The Corridors of Time, Vol. 2, 1927), 91.
[26]Zeuner, “The Pleistocene Chronology of Central Europe,”
Geological Magazine, 1935, opp. 357. Movius,
op. cit.
[27]Mather,
op. cit., 161. Zeuner,
Dating the Past, 200. Movius,
op. cit.
[28]V. Gordon Childe,
Progress and Archaeology (1944), 5.
Chapter 6
[1]“An Extract of Several Letters from Cotton Mather,” etc.,
Philosophical Transactions (1714), 62.
[2]Peter Kalm,
Travels into North America (2nd ed. 1772),
1:277-280. Nels C. Nelson, “The Antiquity of Man in America
in the Light of Archaeology,” in
The American Aborigines
(1933), 90.
[3]M. F. Ashley Montagu, and C. Bernard Peterson, “The
Earliest Account of the Association of Human Artifacts with
Fossil Mammals in North America,”
Proceedings, American
Philosophical Society, 87:419 (1944).
[4]P. W. Lund,
Blik paa Brasiliens Dyreverden, etc. (1842),
195-196.
[5]M. W. Dickeson, “Fossils from Natchez, Mississippi,”
Proceedings,
Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia,
3:106-107 (1846). Charles Lyell,
A Second Visit to the
United States (1st Amer. ed., 1849), 151-152, and
The
Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man (2nd Amer.
ed., 1863), 202-203.
[6]Aleš Hrdlička, “Skeletal Remains Suggesting or Attributed
to Early Man in North America,”
Bulletin, Bureau of American
Ethnology, no. 33 (1907), 23.
[7]Charles C. Abbott, “The Stone Age in New Jersey,”
American
Naturalist, 1872, 6:144-160, 199-229 (1872), and “Evidences
of the Antiquity of Man in Eastern North America,”
Proceedings, American Association for the Advancement of
Science, 37:293-315 (1889), Ernest Volk,
The Archaeology
of the Delaware Valley (
Papers, Peabody Museum, no. 5,
1911).
[8]Frank H. H. Roberts, Jr., “Developments in the Problem of
the North American Paleo-Indian,”
Smithsonian Miscellaneous
Collections, 100:52 (1940).
[9]Aleš Hrdlička and others,
Early Man in South America (
Bulletin,
Bureau of American Ethnology, no. 52, 1912), numerous
references in index.
[10]Hrdlička, “The Problem of Man’s Antiquity in America,”
Proceedings, 8th American Scientific Congress, 2:53 (1942).
[11]Earnest A. Hooton,
Apes, Men, and Morons (1937), 111.
[13]Roberts,
op. cit., 98.
[14]Aleš Hrdlička, “Early Man in America: What Have the
Bones to Say?” in
Early Man, ed. G. G. MacCurdy (1937),
93-94.
[15]Hrdlička, “The Origin and Antiquity of the American Indian,”
Smithsonian Institution Annual Report for 1923, 491.
[16]Hrdlička, “The Problem of Man’s Antiquity in America,”
Proceedings, 8th American Scientific Congress, 2:53 (1942).
[17]Hrdlička, “Early Man in America,” 101.
[18]Hrdlička, “The Coming of Man from Asia in the Light of
Recent Discoveries,”
Proceedings, American Philosophical
Society, 71:401 (1932).
[19]Arthur Keith,
The Antiquity of Man (1920), 286.
[20]H. V. Walter, A. Cathoud, and Anibal Mattos, “The Confins
Man: A Contribution to the Study of Early Man in South
America,” in
Early Man, 345, 348.
[21]Louis R. Sullivan, and Milo Hellman, “The Punin Calvarium,”
Anthropological Papers, American Museum of Natural
History, 23:308-338 (1925). Paul Rivet, “La Race de
la Lagoa Santa chez les populations précolombiennes de
l’équateur,”
Bulletins et Mémoires, Société d’Anthropologie
de Paris, 5th ser. 9:209-271 (1908).
[22]Junius Bird, “Antiquity and Migrations of the Early Inhabitants
of Patagonia,”
Geographical Review, 28:250-275
(1938); Willard F. Libby,
Radiocarbon Dating (1955), 134.
[23]Albert E. Jenks,
Pleistocene Man in Minnesota (1936).
[24]Ernst Antevs, “The Age of ‘Minnesota Man,’”
Year Book,
Carnegie Institution, 36:335-338 (1937), and “Was ‘Minnesota
Girl’ Buried in a Gully?”
Journal of Geology, 46:293-295
(1938). Kirk Bryan and Paul MacClintock, “What Is
Implied by ‘Disturbance’ at the Site of Minnesota Man?”
Journal of Geology, 46:279-292. G. F. Kay and M. M.
Leighton, “Geological Notes on the Occurrence of ‘Minnesota
Man,’”
Journal of Geology, 46:268-278.
[25]Earnest A. Hooton,
Apes, Men, and Morons (1937), 104.
[26]Albert E. Jenks and Lloyd A. Wilford, “Sauk Valley Skeleton,”
Bulletin, Texas Archaeological and Paleontological Society,
10:162-163 (1938).
[27]Hrdlička, “Early Man in America: What Have the Bones to
Say?,” 97-98.
[28]T. D. Stewart, “A Reexamination of the Fossil Human
Skeletal Remains from Melbourne, Florida,”
Smithsonian
Miscellaneous Collections, no. 10, 1946, 106:1-28 (1946).
[29]George and Edna Woodbury,
Prehistoric Skeletal Remains
from the Texas Coast (Medallion Papers, Gila Pueblo, no.
18, 1935) 43. C. F. ten Kate, “Matériaux pour servir à
l’anthropologie de la presqu’île Californienne,”
Bulletin, Société
de l’Anthropologie de Paris, 7:551-769 (1884). Paul
Rivet, “Recherches anthropologiques sur la Basse-Californie,”
Journal, Société des Américanistes de Paris, vol. 6 (1909),
nos. 1, 2.
[30]R. Earle Storie, and Frank Harradine, An Age Estimate of
the Burials Unearthed near Concord, California, Based on
Pedologic Observations (unpublished MS.).
[31]Robert F. Heizer, personal communication, 1946.
[32]Robert F. Heizer and Franklin Fenenga, “Archaeological
Horizons in Central California,”
American Anthropologist,
41:393 (1939).
[33]S. F. Cook and Robert F. Heizer, “The Quantitative Investigation
of Aboriginal Sites: Analyses of Human Bone,”
American Journal of Physical Anthropology, new ser., 5:218
(1947).
[34]Robert F. Heizer, personal communication. Bailey Willis,
“Out of the Long Past,”
Stanford Cardinal, 32:8-11 (1922).
[35]Díaz del Castillo, Bernal,
The True History of the Conquest
of New Spain (1908), 1:286.
[36]Helmut de Terra, Javier Romero, and T. D. Stewart,
Tepexpan
Man (Viking Fund Publications in Anthropology, No.
11, 1949), 33-62.
[37]Glenn A. Black, “‘Tepexpan Man’: A Critique of Method,”
American Antiquity, 14:344-346 (1949).
[38]Franz Weidenreich, “Preliminary Report on the Anatomical
Character of the Human Skeleton from Tepexpan,” in de
Terra,
Tepexpan Man, 123.
[39]Javier Romero, “The Physical Aspects of Tepexpan Man,”
in de Terra,
Tepexpan Man, 105, T. D. Stewart, “Initial
Impressions Regarding the Tepexpan Skeleton,” in de Terra,
Tepexpan Man, 125.
[40]Helmut de Terra, “Comments on Radiocarbon Dates from
Mexico,” in
Radiocarbon Dating (Memoirs, Society for
American Archaeology, vol. 17, no. 1, pt. 2, 1951), 33-34.
H. M. Wormington,
Ancient Man in North America (4th
rev. ed., 1957), 238-241.
[41]Ignacio Marquina,
Arquitectura Prehispanica (1951).
[42]Fred Wendorf and Alex D. Krieger, “New Light on the
Midland Discovery,”
American Antiquity, 25:78 (1959).
[43]George Agogino, personal communication, March 14, 1959.