What can be learnt about the earliest humans in North America? A. They arrived there 16,000 years ago. B. They caused mammoth to disappear. C. They belonged to the Clovis culture. D. They could make tools with bones. 相关知识点: ...
The peopling of the Americas marks a major expansion of humans across the planet. However, questions regarding the timing and mechanisms of this dispersal remain, and the previously accepted model (termed ‘Clovis-first’)—suggesting that the first inha
Humans are thought to have migrated to North America from Siberia over what is today the Bering Strait at the end of the last Ice Age -- between 30,000 and 11,000 years ago. The history of dogs has been intertwined with man since ancient times, and studying canine DNA can provide a g...
McHorse, B.K.; Davis, E.B.; Scott, E. & Jenkins, D.L. 2016. What species of horse was coeval with North America's earliest humans in the Paisley Caves? Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 36:e1214595. doi:10.1080/02724634.2016.12 14595...
directed at the hearth-side activities of the early inhabitants of North America’s desert west, have uncovered evidence for human tobacco use approximately 12,300 years ago, 9,000 years earlier than previously documented. Here we detail the preservation context of the site, discuss its cultural ...
But, as she notes, “I realized that two-thirds of the signs were already in use when humans arrived in Europe,” which suggests that the signs “were part of an existing tradition rather than something new.” She believes they could be part of a larger system that early humans imported...
The earliest immigrants to North America found Indians already living there.The Indians numbered about 500,000 at that time.Their society was a primitive society,but they lived peacefully and welcomed the white strangers to the land.However,these early immigrants from Europe didn't want to share ...
The Division of Labor among Neandertals and Modern Humans in Eurasia The behavioral changes associated with the Upper Paleolithic record signal a wider range of economic and technological roles in forager societies, and these ... SL Kuhn,MC Stiner - 《Current Anthropology》 被引量: 247发表: ...
in most of the Old World. The Neanderthals, forced into mountain strongholds in Croatia, the Iberian Peninsula, the Crimea and elsewhere, would become extinct 25,000 years ago. Finally, around 15,000 years ago, humans crossed from Asia to North America and from there to South America. ...
While MacDonald and her colleagues are uncertain exactly how this ochre was used, evidence from other parts of North America suggest it may have been used as an antiseptic, sunscreen or vermin repellent or for ritual and symbolic purposes such as funerals or art decoration. ...