The first Americans : the Pleistocene colonization of the New World /

As modern humans spread around the globe, the Americas represented the final continental frontier. These first colonists were modern in appearance and technology, but who were they and when did they arrive? Traditional answers to these questions have come under increasing scrutiny in the face of new...

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Bibliographic Details
Corporate Author: Paul L. and Phyllis Wattis Foundation Endowment Symposium
Other Authors: Jablonski, Nina G.
Format: Libro
Language:English
Published: California University of California 2002
Series:Memoirs of the California Academy of Sciences 27
Subjects:
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Description
Summary:As modern humans spread around the globe, the Americas represented the final continental frontier. These first colonists were modern in appearance and technology, but who were they and when did they arrive? Traditional answers to these questions have come under increasing scrutiny in the face of new findings from artifacts, skeletal remains, genes, and languages. The peopling of the Americas has become one of archeology's most compelling and contentious subjects, as these new lines of inquiry and evidence reveal a more complex picture. In The First Americans: The Pleistocene Colonization of the New World, distinguished scientists from the fields of archeology, physical anthropology, paleoecology, genetics, and linguistics assess the latest evidence from Siberia to Chile and other provocative ideas for how, when, and where humans entered the Americas.
Physical Description:331 p.
Audience:Culturas originarias de América
ISBN:0940228505