The Role of High Altitude Landscapes in the Peopling of the New World
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 81st Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL (2016)
Discussions of the "Peopling of the Americas" only rarely mention the high-altitude landscapes of the South American Andes, North American Rocky Mountains, or other mountainous regions of the western hemisphere. This needs to change, because recent research shows that First Americans used even exceptionally high altitudes as early as the terminal Pleistocene (i.e., nearly as early as they penetrated every other region of the Americas). This symposium showcases some of the earliest sites of high-altitude North and South America, in the process revealing the wide-ranging economic and spiritual importance of high mountains for First Americans. The session also includes papers exploring bioarchaeological and genetic data that illuminate and explain early migration patterns and physical challenges that First Americans overcame to utilize the very high altitudes they so clearly valued from the earliest moments of their arrival in the New World.
Other Keywords
andes •
High Altitude •
Colonization •
bioarchaeology •
Bison •
Technology •
Textile •
Hunter-Gatherers •
Basket •
Early Settlement
Geographic Keywords
South America •
North America - Plains •
North America - NW Coast/Alaska
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-14 of 14)
- Documents (14)
- The Anzick Site: A Rocky Mountain locale featuring recurrent human utilization across the millenia. (2016)
- A Biocultural Assessment of Gene Flow, the Andes and the Himalayas (2016)
- Bison Hunters and the Rockies: An Evolving Ontology (2016)
- Early Occupation of the Altiplano of Northern Chile: Activities, Technology, and Mobility (2016)
- Genetic Adaptation to High Altitudes: What Genotypes and What Phenotypes are Involved? (2016)
- Hunter’s Paradise or Hypoxic Wasteland? Recent Research in the Pucuncho Basin, Peru (2016)
- Late Glacial Hunter-Gatherers in the Central Alaska Range (2016)
- Morphological Signatures of High-Altitude Adaptations in the Andean Archaeological Record and the Challenges of Distinguishing Developmental Plasticity from Genetic Adaptations (2016)
- A Paleogenetic Perspective on the Early Population History of the High Altitude Andes (2016)
- Paleoindian Occupation of the Colorado Alpine Ecosystem: A Consideration of Archaeological and Paleoclimatic Data (2016)
- Peopling of the High Andes of Northwestern Argentina (2016)
- Quishqui Punku (PAn 3-170), Early Use of High Altitude Sites in the Callejon de Huaylas (Ancash), Peru (2016)
- The Role of the Rocky Mountains in the Peopling of North America (2016)
- Terminal Pleistocene/Early Holocene Perishable Technologies and the Peopling of the Andes (2016)