Date: 15/07/2023 14:12:57
From: PermeateFree
ID: 2054488
Subject: Humans were in South America at least 25,000 years ago, giant sloth bone pendants reveal

Humans were living in Brazil earlier than previously thought, prehistoric sloth-bone pendants suggest.


An artist’s interpretation of a human crafting a pendant from a giant ground sloth bone around 25,000 years ago in what is now Brazil.

The date that humans arrived in South America has been pushed back to at least 25,000 years ago, based on an unlikely source: bones from an extinct giant ground sloth that were crafted into pendants by ancient people.

Discovered in the Santa Elina rock shelter in central Brazil, three sloth osteoderms — bony deposits that form a kind of protective armor over the skin of animals such as armadillos — found near stone tools sported tiny holes that only humans could have made.

The finding is among the earliest evidence for humans in the Americas, according to a paper published Wednesday (July 12) in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.


Researchers in Brazil found three giant ground sloth osteoderms that were polished and had holes in them. (Image credit: Thaís Pansani)

The Santa Elina rock shelter, located in the Mato Grosso state in central Brazil, has been studied by archaeologists since 1985. Previous research at the site noted the presence of more than 1,000 individual figures and signs drawn on the walls, hundreds of stone tool artifacts, and thousands of sloth osteoderms, with three of the osteoderms showing evidence of human-created drill holes.

The newly published study documents these sloth osteoderms in exquisite detail to show that it is extremely unlikely that the holes in the bones were made naturally, with the implication that these bones push back the date humans settled in Brazil to 25,000 to 27,000 years ago. These dates are significant because of the growing — but still controversial — evidence for very early human occupation in South America, such as a date of 22,000 years ago for the Toca da Tira Peia rock shelter in eastern Brazil.

Using a combination of microscopic and macroscopic visualization techniques, the team discovered that the osteoderms, and even their tiny holes, had been polished, and noted traces of stone tool incisions and scraping marks on the artifacts. Animal-made bite marks on all three osteoderms led them to exclude rodents as the creators of the holes.

“These observations show that these three osteoderms were modified by humans into artefacts, probably personal ornaments,” the researchers wrote in their paper.


The osteoderms had traces of stone tool incisions and scraping marks, which suggests they were modified by humans.

In an email to Live Science, study co-author Mírian Pacheco, a lecturer in paleontology at the Federal University of São Carlos, Brazil, noted that “it is virtually impossible to define the real meaning these artifacts had for the occupants of Santa Elina.” However, the shape and large number of osteoderms “may have influenced the making of a specific type of artifact such as a pendant,” she said.

The presence of human-modified sloth bones in association with stone tools from geological layers that date to 25,000 to 27,000 years ago is strong evidence that people arrived in South America far earlier than previously assumed.


It’s possible that ancient humans wore these bones as pendants.

“Our evidence reinforces the interpretation that our colleagues working on Santa Elina have been talking about for 30 years,” Thaís Pansani, a paleontologist at the Federal University of São Carlos in Brazil, said in an email to Live Science — namely, that “humans were in Central Brazil at least 27,000 years ago.”

The finding shows that ancient people used sloth remains in a variety of ways, said Matthew Bennett, a geologist at Bournemouth University in the U.K. who has researched human-sloth interactions in North America but was not involved in this project.

“This is an exciting piece of work which may, in time, support the idea of peopling of the Americas during the Last Glacial Maximum,” the coldest part of the last ice age, Bennett told Live Science in an email.

However, many sites in South America have not yet been fully studied, meaning the debate about humans’ arrival in the Americas is far from over. “We believe that there should be more evidence waiting to be found in the rock shelters and caves of Brazil in places little or not explored,” Pansani said.

https://www.livescience.com/archaeology/humans-were-in-south-america-at-least-25000-years-ago-giant-sloth-bone-pendants-reveal

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Date: 15/07/2023 14:45:19
From: party_pants
ID: 2054503
Subject: re: Humans were in South America at least 25,000 years ago, giant sloth bone pendants reveal

Very interesting. Brazil is a long way from the Bering Sea area, and many climate zones and biomes away. It pushes for a very early date for the first humans crossing into the Americas.

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Date: 15/07/2023 15:33:02
From: Bubblecar
ID: 2054520
Subject: re: Humans were in South America at least 25,000 years ago, giant sloth bone pendants reveal

It is interesting, ta.

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Date: 15/07/2023 15:34:55
From: roughbarked
ID: 2054521
Subject: re: Humans were in South America at least 25,000 years ago, giant sloth bone pendants reveal

Bubblecar said:


It is interesting, ta.

+1

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Date: 15/07/2023 15:35:22
From: roughbarked
ID: 2054522
Subject: re: Humans were in South America at least 25,000 years ago, giant sloth bone pendants reveal

party_pants said:


Very interesting. Brazil is a long way from the Bering Sea area, and many climate zones and biomes away. It pushes for a very early date for the first humans crossing into the Americas.

That would make sense yes.

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Date: 15/07/2023 15:38:59
From: The Rev Dodgson
ID: 2054524
Subject: re: Humans were in South America at least 25,000 years ago, giant sloth bone pendants reveal

roughbarked said:


party_pants said:

Very interesting. Brazil is a long way from the Bering Sea area, and many climate zones and biomes away. It pushes for a very early date for the first humans crossing into the Americas.

That would make sense yes.

If the first S. American people traveled down from the Bering Sea.

It’s quite possible they sailed there directly, isn’t it?

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Date: 15/07/2023 15:41:22
From: dv
ID: 2054528
Subject: re: Humans were in South America at least 25,000 years ago, giant sloth bone pendants reveal

Humans in 2023 make artefacts out of mammoth tusks and therefore mammoths survived until 2023…

(This is interesting but I’ll wait for it to cook for a bit.)

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Date: 15/07/2023 15:46:38
From: party_pants
ID: 2054539
Subject: re: Humans were in South America at least 25,000 years ago, giant sloth bone pendants reveal

The Rev Dodgson said:


roughbarked said:

party_pants said:

Very interesting. Brazil is a long way from the Bering Sea area, and many climate zones and biomes away. It pushes for a very early date for the first humans crossing into the Americas.

That would make sense yes.

If the first S. American people traveled down from the Bering Sea.

It’s quite possible they sailed there directly, isn’t it?

from where?

The nearest would be Afica, but I think the genetic evidence rules that out. The genetic evidence points to a migration from eastern Asia to north America.

There’s no genetic evidence for Pacific Islanders either, in fact most of the Pacific Islands were uninhabited until much later (around 1500 – 1000 BCE) because the sailing technology and navigation techniques took a long time to develop.

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Date: 15/07/2023 15:58:20
From: buffy
ID: 2054553
Subject: re: Humans were in South America at least 25,000 years ago, giant sloth bone pendants reveal

party_pants said:


The Rev Dodgson said:

roughbarked said:

That would make sense yes.

If the first S. American people traveled down from the Bering Sea.

It’s quite possible they sailed there directly, isn’t it?

from where?

The nearest would be Afica, but I think the genetic evidence rules that out. The genetic evidence points to a migration from eastern Asia to north America.

There’s no genetic evidence for Pacific Islanders either, in fact most of the Pacific Islands were uninhabited until much later (around 1500 – 1000 BCE) because the sailing technology and navigation techniques took a long time to develop.

I knew I’d read about some genetic research somewhere not so long ago.

“Earliest South American migrants had Indigenous Australian, Melanesian ancestry”

https://www.science.org/content/article/earliest-south-american-migrants-had-australian-melanesian-ancestry

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Date: 15/07/2023 16:01:09
From: OCDC
ID: 2054555
Subject: re: Humans were in South America at least 25,000 years ago, giant sloth bone pendants reveal

buffy said:

party_pants said:
The Rev Dodgson said:
If the first S. American people traveled down from the Bering Sea.

It’s quite possible they sailed there directly, isn’t it?

from where?

The nearest would be Afica, but I think the genetic evidence rules that out. The genetic evidence points to a migration from eastern Asia to north America.

There’s no genetic evidence for Pacific Islanders either, in fact most of the Pacific Islands were uninhabited until much later (around 1500 – 1000 BCE) because the sailing technology and navigation techniques took a long time to develop.

I knew I’d read about some genetic research somewhere not so long ago.

“Earliest South American migrants had Indigenous Australian, Melanesian ancestry”

https://www.science.org/content/article/earliest-south-american-migrants-had-australian-melanesian-ancestry

Interesting. I shall read.

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Date: 15/07/2023 17:41:04
From: Ogmog
ID: 2054606
Subject: re: Humans were in South America at least 25,000 years ago, giant sloth bone pendants reveal

I had no problem assuming that those same itchy-footed individuals
(with an evolutionary propensity to wander/seek & explore)
who initially headed out of the Rift Valley and JUST KEPT GOING…
clear out of Africa, into India and just kept going at first along the coast then into
canoes, then you can easily imagine them island-hopping all the way to AUstralia.

Personally, I have zero trouble whatsoever imaging “Maoris in Mexico” *
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M%C4%81ori_people

…but for the life of me
it’s hard to imagine them wanting to leave Hawaii…

…it’s a joke…
get over it fercrysake
not EVERYTHING is an
open ended invitation to brawl

Reply Quote

Date: 17/07/2023 21:25:26
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 2055297
Subject: re: Humans were in South America at least 25,000 years ago, giant sloth bone pendants reveal

Brazil, huh. That’s a fair way south.

We now know that the Clovis migration 11,500 – 10,800 BCE wiped out (ie. killed) almost all earlier migrants to the Americas.

From Wikipedia “The oldest claimed human archaeological site in the Americas is the Pedra Furada hearths in Brazil, controversially dated …”

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