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|   IN AMERICA   Erich Fred Legner      Please CLICK on highlighted sections for detail:            
  This site records efforts and recent findings in the quest for traces
  of the earliest human colonizers in America and to determine whether one of
  our distant ancestors, Homo erectus, also dispersed into America.            
  Estimates of the earliest dates of human colonization in America area
  have traditionally varied between 12,000-16,000 BP, the latter occurring at Monte Verde, Chile.  These have been based
  largely on the presence of a unique American invention, the Clovis Point.  However, recent mitochondrial DNA data
  point to much earlier dates being possible, e.g., 40,000 BP.  These data reveal three or four distinct
  migrations of humans to the Americas, and a fifth mysterious migration
  indicated from data collected among the Ojibwa Amerindian group in the Great
  Lakes region of North America.  This
  group, called “X” had obtained genetic variation that is found in certain
  areas of northern Europe, which may have been contributed by copper-seeking
  Scandinavians at the end of the Bronze Age (see Bronze). 
  Although archeological evidence and remains of prehuman Homo
  erectus are known from Eurasia, Africa and Asia, none has been verified
  in The Americas.  This may be due in
  part because specific searches for such evidence are few in America.  Nevertheless, recent findings are
  revealing the possible existence of tools and other artifacts left by Homo
  erectus.  One site in San
  Bernardino County, California, The Calico Dig, has come up with suspicious
  findings, albeit they are difficult to verify (Dr. D. Simpson, personal
  communication).               
  There are ongoing discoveries in Midwestern and Eastern North America
  of Homo sapiens occurrence that are of great interest.  For example, a site in Indiana contains obvious points, and
  flaked chips, some so-called “microchips” and a couple of axe heads, many
  with stylized patterns and consistent markings and carvings that do not seem
  to be attributable to natural causes [see Indiana
  Site].  There are many stones with 1-2 cm. carved
  shapes of humans, animals and possibly some primitive writings.  Numerous carvings of the American Lion (see Lions), the American horse and cameloids point to an
  early Pre-Classic date for this site. 
  Yet these animals were all presumed to have become extinct by the end
  of the Pleistocene around 9,000 B.C.! [see Extinct].  A
  site along the Savannah River of southern United States is producing dates
  that exceed 40,000 BC as well as other sites in South America (see Savannah).  There is conclusive evidence for the hunting by humans during the
  Pleistocene (See:  Mammoths, Camelids, & Lions).  Discoveries of Ice Age human footprints at White Sands, New
  Mexico now document human presence in North America at more than 23 thousand
  years before the 21st Century (View footprint
  details).            
  It is now well known that “Stick Writings,” some called Ogam, appear
  all over the North American Continent. 
  The works of Barry Fell have been well documented (See Report) and the recent translation
  of the Horse Creek Petroglyph in West Virginia by Edo Nyland (See Report) attest to the literacy of
  people traveling in America during the past several thousand years.  Yet these translations are restricted to
  stationary sites such as petroglyphs appearing on rock faces.  There has been no translation of stick
  writings on smaller stone objects.  [Also see Ogam Script]     Bischoff, J. C., M. Ikeya
  & F. E. Budinger.  1984.  TL/ESR study of the hearth feature of the
  Calico archeological site,            California. 
  Amer.Antiquity, Wash., DC. 49(4): 764-774.             Tech. Rept.,
  Wash., D.C.               Relands,
  CA.  Vol. 36, No. 3.           |