My thoughts on History Channel’s “Journey to 10,000 BC”
Even though I subscribe to the Siberian origin of native Americans, I did appreciate how Dennis Stanford made a cameo and explained his hypothesis that the Clovis archaeology could have originated from sea-faring Solutrean people from Europe.
March 11, 2008 at 9:12 am
Trying to tie Europeans to the first migrants of the Americas and Clovis points is far-fetched and borders on ignorance. All that was mentioned by Dennis Stanford was pure unsubstantiated theories, clouded by his own desire to associate his ancestors with the first Americans. Also, his ideas that because Clovis points resemble a few Solutrean points mandates that the makers originate in Europe (southern France), is nothing but a sorry attempt to back his theory.
concolor1
April 1, 2008 at 2:36 pm
I’m right in the middle of watching the History Channel piece, and I was irritated how the “paleo-Indians” had distinctly “non-Indian” beards and non-Siberian features. I was correct in surmising this was a “lead-in” to the “Solutrean Hypothesis,” which is the darling of Dennis Stanford and a few others, but has scant chance of finding acceptance and consensus among mainstream science.
I tend to overreact on this stuff, but then I live in Utah where selling non-Siberian origins of Native Americans is a religion, a business, and the focus of a large university that routinely disseminates religious apologetics as part of its curriculum.
They routinely adopt the insulting tactics of Lawrence Brown above, who erroneously projects a gap in his own knowledge onto others; in point of fact, the only DNA evidence that suggested possible European presence in the New World was the presence of “Haplogroup X” in mitochondrial DNA found in Native Americans.
As my friend, Simon Southerton (author of “Losing a Lost Tribe”) points out, however, a much more closely related X-lineage was found among the Altai in Southern Siberia, and this evidence is powerful enough to constitute proof of Native American’s Asian origins, particularly when combined with the archeological record.
Writerfellahere --
ReplyDelete'Haplogroup X' mitochondrial DNA only has been detected among CANADIAN Natives, period (read: Vikings!). With the scientific nod that Asian peoples came and went on the NovaMundian continents, such theories only ask another question that NAGPRA is one of the factors behind such theorization...
All Best
Russ Bates
'writerfella'
I thought the Solutrean hypothesis was dead. There is no evidence for Pleistocene peoples crossing over from Europe. A good overview is Did Europeans Discover America Before Columbus. The genetics, as well, seems to continually point to Asia as a point of origin.
ReplyDeleteThanks for writing, Archaeologist. The Solutrean hypothesis may be dead in scientific circles, but it appeared on Journey to 10,000 BC in March 2008. That suggests somebody still believes in it.
ReplyDeleteWriterfella here --
ReplyDeleteAlmost any scientific hypothesis has its adherents and its detractors. That is one of the main values in science in that little is written in concrete and discussion of same is ongoing. Science evolves whereas the court of human opinion results in statuary...
All Best
Russ Bates
'writerfella'