GPS News  
The Voyage To America

The most accepted theory is based on findings of stone tools from the Clovis culture in soil layers dating back to approximately 13,000 BC. According to the theory, people from Siberia migrated, perhaps in search of mammoth, across the land bridge that once connected Siberia and North America.
by Staff Writers
Copenhagen, Denmark (SPX) Apr 09, 2008
Professor Eske Willerslev was surprised by the results of the DNA tests conducted by himself and his colleagues on samples of what turned out to be fossilised human faeces found in deep caves in the Oregon desert. The oldest of the droppings have been carbon-dated to be approximately 14,340 years old. Willerslev's faeces samples clearly contain two main genetic types of Asian origin that are unique to present-day North American Indians.

Not only is this proof that the American Indians are descendants of the first immigrants to the continent, it is also proof that immigration took place approximately 1,000 years earlier than otherwise believed.

The American continent was the last of the world's continents to be populated. There are many contradictory and more or less well-founded scientific theories on when this occurred and from where the first immigrants came. These theories span from immigration via the icy Atlantic Ocean to Thor Heyerdahl's papyrus boat expeditions from Africa to America.

The most accepted theory is based on findings of stone tools from the Clovis culture in soil layers dating back to approximately 13,000 BC. According to the theory, people from Siberia migrated, perhaps in search of mammoth, across the land bridge that once connected Siberia and North America.

From there, they continued south and spread out across the American continent. The migration passed through a corridor that opened up approximately 14,000 years ago in the giant glacier that covered the American continent. But these new findings call this immigration theory into question.

"Our findings show that there were people south of the ice cap several hundred years before the ice-free corridor developed. The first humans either had to walk or sail along the American west coast to get around the ice cap," explains Eske Willerslev, and concludes, "That is, unless they arrived so long before the last ice age that the land passage wasn't yet blocked by ice."

Related Links
University of Copenhagen
All About Human Beings and How We Got To Be Here



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Researchers Find Pre-Clovis Human DNA
Eugene OR (SPX) Apr 07, 2008
Human DNA from dried excrement recovered from Oregon's Paisley Caves is the oldest found yet in the New World -- dating to 14,300 years ago, some 1,200 years before Clovis culture -- and provides apparent genetic ties to Siberia or Asia, according to an international team of 13 scientists.







  • World grapples with aviation's climate change footprint
  • Europe's EADS finds sweet home in Alabama despite uproar
  • A380 superjumbo makes European debut in London
  • Aviation industry must act fast on climate change: Airbus chief

  • New York nixes traffic congestion charge
  • 2007 Alternative Fuel Autos Sales Up By 15 Percent
  • Thailand approves 688 mln dlrs in eco-car investments
  • Sandia's Fleet Services Department Exceeds DOE Fuel And Energy Efficiency Standards

  • General Dynamics Awarded Army Contract For WIN-T Satellite Communications Terminals
  • Advanced Mobile Satellite Communications Network Being Rolled Out For Florida National Guard
  • Lockheed Martin Team Awarded AMF JTRS Contract
  • Lockheed Martin Team Achieves Major Milestone On US Navy's Mobile User Objective System

  • Russia sees US missile shield as inevitable: report
  • Bush Scores Victory In BMD Plans For Europe Part Two
  • Missile defence at heart of Bush-Putin swansong on Black Sea
  • Israel seeks to reassure neighbours over missile drill

  • African inflation could cause 'humanitarian tsunami': Brussels
  • China can meet domestic grain demand: premier Wen
  • Australian minister defends kangaroo culls
  • Specially-Designed Soils Could Help Combat Climate Change

  • Big Tokyo quake would cause human gridlock: study
  • Disasters In Small Communities: Researchers Discuss How To Help
  • Raytheon Develops Advanced Concrete Breaking Technology For Urban Search And Rescue
  • Floods, cyclones, devastate southern Africa: UN

  • Chemists work on bamboo fabric development
  • Saab Signs GIRAFFE AMB Multi Mission Radar Contract
  • TDRS-1 Satellite Reaches 25 Years Of Age
  • The Endless Dawn Of The Ion Age

  • European Space Freighter cleared to dock with ISS: ESA
  • Toshiba robot can do the job of the remote control
  • Jules Verne Set For Next Step On Road To Automated Station Docking
  • High-Schoolers Go Into Overdrive At FIRST Robotics Competition

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement