• Clovis peoples of 12 kya western Canada were excellent mammoth hunters

    From Primum Sapienti@invalide@invalid.invalid to sci.anthropology.paleo,sci.archaeology on Sun Dec 8 20:36:09 2024
    From Newsgroup: sci.anthropology.paleo


    https://www.livescience.com/archaeology/early-americans-ate-tons-of-mammoth-13-000-year-old-bones-from-clovis-culture-baby-reveal

    Early Indigenous Americans relied heavily on
    meat from mammoths to survive, according to
    a new study, which suggests they were
    top-notch experts at hunting the massive
    beasts.

    The findings, reported in a study published
    Wednesday (Dec. 4) in the journal Science
    Advances, are based on chemical analyses of
    the bones of an 18-month-old boy rCo dubbed
    Anzick-1 rCo who lived almost 13,000 years ago
    in what is now Montana.

    The boy was probably still breast-feeding,
    and the results reveal that the diet of his
    mother was "closest to that of [the
    now-extinct] scimitar cat, a mammoth
    specialist," the researchers wrote in the
    study.

    To investigate the diet of the boy's mother,
    the team looked at stable radioisotopes rCo
    atoms of an element that have a different
    number of neutrons in their nuclei rCo in the
    boy's bones. The technique measures the
    distinctive abundance of specific
    radioisotopes, which can be used to
    reconstruct the diet of an ancient person.

    The boy's "isotopic fingerprint" was
    probably inherited directly from his mother
    and showed that mammoths were an important
    source of food for his entire family group,
    the authors wrote in the study.

    That, in turn, suggests that people from
    the Western Clovis culture, to which the
    boy belonged, were regularly hunting
    mammoths rCo and to a lesser extent elk
    (Cervus canadensis), bison (Bison bison
    and B. antiquus) and a now-extinct genus
    of camel (Camelops).
    ...


    https://www.science.org/doi/epdf/10.1126/sciadv.adr3814
    Mammoth featured heavily in Western Clovis diet

    Ancient Native American ancestors (Clovis) have
    been interpreted as either specialized megafauna
    hunters orgeneralist foragers. Supporting data
    are typically indirect (toolkits, associated
    fauna) or speculative (models,actualistic
    experiments). Here, we present stable isotope
    analyses of the only known Clovis individual,
    the 18-month-old Anzick child, to directly infer
    maternal protein diet. Using comparative fauna
    from this region andperiod, we find that mammoth
    was the largest contributor to Clovis diet,
    followed by elk and bison/camel, whilethe
    contribution of small mammals was negligible,
    broadly consistent with the Clovis
    zooarchaeological record. When compared with
    second-order consumers, the Anzick-1 maternal
    diet is closest to that of scimitar cat, a
    mammoth specialist. Our findings are
    consistent with the Clovis megafaunal
    specialist model, using sophisticated
    technology and high residential mobility to
    subsist on the highest ranked prey, an
    adaptation allowing them torapidly expand
    across the Americas south of the Pleistocene
    ice sheets.


    --- Synchronet 3.21e-Linux NewsLink 1.2