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| PLEISTOCENE HUNTING BY HUMANS OF ANIMALS   
     SUMMARY          The only certain evidence for
  prehistoric human hunting of horse and camel in North America occurs at the
  Wally’s Beach site, Canada. Here, the butchered remains of seven horses and
  one camel are associated with 29 nondiagnostic lithic artifacts. Twenty-seven
  new radiocarbon ages on the bones of these animals revise the age of these
  kill and butchering localities to 13,300  B.C.E. The tight chronological clustering of the eight kill
  localities at Wally’s Beach indicates these animals were killed over a short
  period.  Human hunting of horse and
  camel in Canada, coupled with mammoth, mastodon, sloth, and gomphothere
  hunting documented at other sites from 14,800–12,700 B.C.E., show that 6 of
  the 36 genera of megafauna that went extinct by approximately 12,700  B.C.E. were hunted by humans. This study
  shows the importance of accurate geochronology, without which significant
  discoveries will go unrecognized and the empirical data used to build models
  explaining the peopling of the Americas and Pleistocene extinctions will be
  in error.     -
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  The only known late Pleistocene horse and camel kill and butchering
  localities occur at the southern margin of the ice-free corridor in the
  rolling Prairie of southwest Alberta, Canada, at the Wally’s Beach site
  (DhPg-8), about 180 km south of Calgary. 
  Here, seven butchered horses (Equus conversidens) (1) and one butchered camel (Camelops
  hesternus) were found associated with nondiagnostic lithic
  artifacts. These sites were originally assigned to the Clovis complex based
  on five inaccurate radiocarbon ages and horse protein residue extracted from
  two unassociated fluted projectile points. Here were present 27 new
  radiocarbon ages that revise the age of these kill localities. These new ages
  show that accurate radiocarbon geochronology requires rigorous sample
  pretreatment and isolation of chemically pure fractions, especially to
  accurately date bone.  Without such
  care, significant archaeological discoveries will go unrecognized and be
  misinterpreted. The new ages for Wally’s Beach also allow us to explore the
  role of hunting in the extinction of megafauna at the end of the Pleistocene.          The eight kill and butchering
  localities at Wally’s Beach occur 30 m above the St. Mary River. Individual
  carcasses and associated artifacts were buried to a depth of 1.5–2.0 m in
  aeolian loess and sand that overlies Wisconsinan glacio-fluvial sediments.
  Each carcass was isolated and horizontally separated from other carcasses by
  25–100 m over a distance of 500 m. At each locality, some bones of each
  carcass were still articulated, although most were scattered and with some
  elements missing.  Multiple cutmarks
  made by stone tools occur on the hyoid bone of Horse B and on a cervical
  vertebra of the camel. The ribs of the camel display spiral fractures where
  they were broken away from the vertebral column. These taphonomic patterns
  are consistent with human disarticulation; the absence of carnivore gnaw
  marks and other damage to the bones suggests rapid burial of the horse and
  camel localities. Twenty-nine lithic artifacts and one rounded cobble were
  found at the horse localities, with at least one lithic artifact associated
  with each horse. Three lithic artifacts were associated with the camel. These
  are all nondiagnostic artifacts and are mostly flakes, used flakes, and core
  tools.  Most are made of quartzite
  that is locally available in the glacial till, but some are made of chert.           Previously, four radiocarbon ages
  ranging from 10,980 ± 80 14C y B.C.E. (TO-7691) to 11,350 ± 80 14C y B.C.E. (TO-8972) were
  obtained from bison, horse, muskox, and caribou bones from the aeolian
  sediments at Wally’s Beach.  A single
  date of 11,070 ± 80 14C y B.C.E. (TO-13513) was obtained on the
  rib of the butchered camel.  All of
  these dates were on gelatin and are considered inaccurate because of the
  chemical fraction dated.  None of the
  seven horses with butchering evidence and associated with artifacts was directly
  dated in the original study.           There were 27 new radiocarbon dates obtained
  on XAD-purified collagen and other chemical fractions extracted from bones
  from all seven butchered horses, the butchered camel, and a nearby,
  unbutchered muskox (Bootherium bombifrons).  These ages are derived from XAD-purified
  amino acids from bone collagen and are free of younger and older organic
  contaminants, thereby enabling accurate dating of the bone.  Eight XAD-collagen dates for the horses
  associated with artifacts range from 11,410 ± 30 14C y B.C.E.
  (UCIAMS-127349) to 11,470 ± 35 14C y B.C.E. (UCIAMS-127348). All ages overlap
  at 1 SD and are averaged to 11,450 ± 10 14C yBP or 13270–13,310 B.C.E.
  The camel yielded two XAD-collagen ages that overlap by 1 SD and average
  11,440 ± 25 14C y B.C.E. or
  13,255–13,315  B.C.E. The radiocarbon
  and calibrated ages for the camel overlap with the ages for the horses at 1
  SD. An average of all horse and camel XAD-collagen ages (n
  = 10) is 11,445 ± 10 14C y B.C.E. or 13,270–13,310  B.C.E. 
  The earlier dates on gelatin underestimated the ages of these
  localities by 100–400 radiocarbon years. 
  Similarly, the initial gelatin radiocarbon age of 10,980 ± 80 14C y B.C.E. (TO-7691)
  for the muskox has been revised to 11,320 ± 30 14C y B.C.E.
  (UCIAMS-127373) or 13,120–13,200  B.C.E.
  and shows that the unbutchered muskox remains are not temporally equivalent
  to the butchered horse and camel remains.          The new accurate and precise AMS ages
  suggest contemporaneous hunting of camel and horse at around 13,300 B.C.E.
  and at the Wally’s Beach site. The large number of kill and butchering
  localities in a small area that tightly overlap in time indicates intensive
  utilization of the site by late Pleistocene hunters and likely represents
  multiple hunting events over a short period, perhaps a year, a season, or
  even a single hunting event that lasted a few days. Trackways with foot
  impressions of mammoth, horse, camel, bison, and other animals near the kill
  sites indicate that this was a well-traveled game trail. No formal hunting
  weapons were found at these kill localities and the tools left
  behind—bifaces, choppers, expedient tools, and flakes—were likely used to
  butcher the animals. These nondiagnostic artifacts date three centuries
  before the oldest firm date for Clovis of 12,915–13,085  B.C.E. 
  It is suggested that the Clovis complex may date back to approximately
  13,315–13,475  B.C.E. at the Aubrey
  site in Texas, and 13,325–13,440  B.C.E.
  at El Fin del Mundo, Mexico.  If true,
  then the Wally’s Beach kill sites would be contemporaneous with Clovis.
  However, these earlier ages are based on two radiocarbon ages on charcoal at
  Aubrey and a single radiocarbon age on a small fragment of dispersed charcoal
  at El Fin del Mundo. Until these ages are replicated, these early dates
  remain uncertain.  Protein residue
  extracted from two fluted projectile points found within a 1.5-km radius from
  the kill sites tested positive for horse protein using the cross-over
  immunoelectrophoresis method. Because these projectile points are out of
  context and distant from the horse and camel kill sites, it is unknown if
  they have any association chronologically with the horse and camel kills.   Discussion       Besides horse and camel hunting at Wally’s
  Beach, the archaeological record of dated megafauna kill and butchering sites
  with associated artifacts shows that humans hunted three genera of
  proboscideans in North America: mammoth (Mammuthus),
  mastodon (Mammut), and gomphothere (Cuvieronius).
  Proboscidean hunting began by at least 14,800  B.C.E. and continued until this group went extinct around 12,700
   B.C.E.,
  as documented by stone and osseous artifacts associated with accurately dated
  mammoth and mastodon bones at four sites predating Clovis [Schaefer, WI.  Hebior, WI, Manis, WA, Page-Ladson, FL and
  seven Clovis kill and butchering localities [Colby, WY; Murray Springs, AZ;
  Blackwater Draw, NM; Lehner, AZ; Domebo, Ozk; Dent, CO; Lange Ferguson, ND.
  Clovis artifacts are associated with other mammoth and mastodon kill and
  butchering sites, but these are not dated. Two dated sites provide evidence
  of pre-Clovis and Clovis human–mammoth interaction where stone artifacts were
  absent. At the Lindsay site in Montana, the remains of a single mammoth
  dating to 12,300 ± 25 14C y B.C.E. (14,125–14,270  B.C.E.) exhibit cutmarks and bone breakage
  patterns that indicate human utilization of the mammoth.  Similarly, at the Clovis-age Lubbock Lake
  site in Texas, taphonomic patterns and cutmarks also indicated human activity
  at the site at 11,100 ± 60 14C y B.C.E. (12,095–13,060  B.C.E.) At El Fin del Mundo, Mexico,
  Gomphothere remains appear to be associated with 21 lithic flakes and 4
  Clovis projectile points.  A single
  piece of dispersed charcoal from the surface yielding the artifacts and
  animal remains dates to 11,550 ± 60 14C y B.C.E. (AA-100181A) (13,325–13,440  B.C.E.); however, direct dating of the
  skeleton is needed to confirm this age estimate. In addition to Proboscidean
  fauna, a femur from a ground sloth (Megalonyx jeffersonii)
  dated to 11,740 ± 35 14C y B.C.E. (UCIAMS-38250) or 13,485–13,575  B.C.E. at the Firelands site in Ohio,
  exhibits multiple cutmarks that indicate human interaction with the sloth
  despite the absence of stone tools.  Combined, this evidence indicates that humans hunted at least
  six genera of megafauna for 2,000 y before their extinction by around 12,700  B.C.E.          
  Although this empirical record is small, some tentative patterns are
  emerging. First, only solitary animals appear to have been hunted from
  approximately 15,000–13,300  B.C.E.  Multiple animal kills at a single locality
  occurred after that time. As shown here, eight animals were killed at Wally’s
  Beach in a single event or as events that occurred over a short period around
  13,300  B.C.E. Similarly, at many of
  the later Clovis sites, multiple mammoths were killed during a single event
  or at the same locality over time. For example, at the Lehner site in the San
  Pedro Valley, AZ, 13 mammoths associated with Clovis projectile points were
  dated to 10,950 ± 40 14C y B.C.E. (12,735–12,825  B.C.E..  Furthermore, along a 30-km reach of the San Pedro Valley are
  five more Clovis kill sites with seven mammoth carcasses.  Dense kill site areas such as these may
  represent hunters taking advantage of the aggregation of megafauna around
  waterholes as climate and environments rapidly changed at the very end of the
  Pleistocene.  These animals may have
  been easy to find by following game trails that connected refugia.           The second pattern concerns the
  geographic distribution of the known kill sites. The oldest documented kill
  and butchering sites are concentrated along the edges of the continent,
  especially along the late Pleistocene ice margin.  This may reflect sample bias or may indicate that initial
  colonization of the continent first took place along the ice margin, a
  familiar environment to the first American migrants. In contrast, Clovis
  period megafauna hunting seems to have been primarily confined to the interior
  plains and deserts, perhaps reflecting the last refugia of proboscideans.           Although climate and habitat change
  at the end of the Pleistocene may have played the most significant role in
  the decline of megafauna, hunting by humans was also surely a factor in the
  demise and extinction of some animals; hunting of dwindling megafauna
  populations would have negatively impacted these animals by increasing mortality
  rates and reducing recruitment rates. The impact of hunting on megafaunal
  populations from approximately 15,000–13,000  B.C.E. is unclear because the human population in North America
  was likely small at that time. The only hunting weapon dating to this time
  period at a butchering site is the tip of an osseous projectile point
  embedded in the rib of a mastodon at the Manis site in Washington. These
  early people likely also used stone projectile points, but these have not
  been found yet at an early kill and butchering site. The invention and
  deployment of the lanceolate, fluted projectile point—the hallmark of
  Clovis—by at least 13,000  B.C.E. and
  its use until approximately 12,700  B.C.E.
  along with the continued use of osseous weapons improved hunting success and
  likely helped drive the remaining megafauna to extinction.           Finally, to enhance our understanding
  of the early time horizon before fluted point technology became common and to
  better understand the extent and impact of human hunting on the megafauna
  requires a shift in our “search image.” It must be realized that kill sites
  of this age will probably have very few artifacts in total. These few
  artifacts may be nondiagnostic and nonlithic; it should not necessarily be expected
  to find a diagnostic artifact form.  In
  some cases, artifacts may even be absent, so identifying human involvement
  with the death of an animal may have to be demonstrated by taphonomic
  criteria. Most importantly, accurate and precise dating is fundamental to
  interpreting these important sites and building a solid empirical foundation
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