South America's early migrants reached a remote oasis more than 14,000 feet high.
Vicuñas graze in the Pucuncho Basin, where they may have been hunted by Paleo-Indians as early as 12,800 years ago.
Paleo-Indian hunters ventured high into the Andes Mountains as early
as 12,800 years ago, as much as two thousand years sooner than
previously thought.The finding, reported Thursday in the journal Science, suggests that South America's first inhabitants raced across the continent rather than spreading slowly to its remotest corners.
"It was a land rush, a free-for-all," said study author Kurt Rademaker,
an archaeologist at the University of Tubingen in Germany. "People were
much more capable and adaptable than we ever thought."
Rademaker discovered evidence of their pioneering abilities
high in the arid Peruvian Andes, in a place known today as the Pucuncho
Basin. With plenty of water, grass, and vicuñas (a relative of the llama), "it was an oasis in a desert region," he said.
Excavation of the sites yielded numerous stone tools,
including two "fishtail" arrowheads distinctive to South America's first
peoples. Radiocarbon dating of charcoal and animal bones indicated that
Paleo-Indian hunters had been using the site as a base camp as early as
12,800 years ago.
Vicuñas and llamas, rather than obsidian, likely attracted
hunters to the higher altitudes of the Andes, Rademaker said. Even
today, people herd llamas across the 51 square mile (132 square
kilometers) Pucuncho Basin.
Most likely the ancient hunters traveled seasonally to the
base camp, staying there from March through November while they hunted
llamas and deer.
High Living
Rademaker's research, supported in part by the National
Geographic Society Waitt Grants Program, overturns conventional wisdom
that prehistoric people needed long periods of time to genetically adapt
to the challenges of living at high altitudes, especially the thin air.
Oxygen pressure at the Pucuncho Basin is only 60 percent of its
strength at sea level. (Climbers who venture there today spend time
acclimatizing.)
"These are some of the highest known examples of human occupation," says anthropologist Tom Dillehay of Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. "But it is not a
great surprise, because we find people expanded widely wherever we look
across South America."
Dillehay points to evidence of ancient human occupation
everywhere from Monte Verde in southern Chile (dated to 14,500 to 14,250
years ago) to Quebrada Jaguay on the Peruvian coast.
These and other sites are changing our understanding of when and how quickly humans first populated South America, says archaeologist Javier Claudio Aráoz Patané of Argentina's Universidad Nacional de Córdoba.
"It can be argued strongly that these human groups arrived
in the final Pleistocene times, moving and occupying different
environments quickly," he noted in an email.
Geologists have shown that the basin was clear of Ice Age
glaciers by 15,000 years ago. "Once the ice receded, the grass grew and
the animals followed," Dillehay says. "Followed by the hunters, I'm
sure."
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