Origins and spread of fluted-point technology in the Canadian Ice-Free Corridor and eastern Beringia

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2018 Apr 17;115(16):4116-4121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1800312115. Epub 2018 Apr 2.

Abstract

Fluted projectile points have long been recognized as the archaeological signature of early humans dispersing throughout the Western Hemisphere; however, we still lack a clear understanding of their appearance in the interior "Ice-Free Corridor" of western Canada and eastern Beringia. To solve this problem, we conducted a geometric morphometric shape analysis and a phylogenetic analysis of technological traits on fluted points from the archaeological records of northern Alaska and Yukon, in combination with artifacts from further south in Canada, the Great Plains, and eastern United States to investigate the plausibility of historical relatedness and evolutionary patterns in the spread of fluted-point technology in the latest Pleistocene and earliest Holocene. Results link morphologies and technologies of Clovis, certain western Canadian, and northern fluted points, suggesting that fluting technology arrived in the Arctic from a proximate source in the interior Ice-Free Corridor and ultimately from the earliest populations in temperate North America, complementing new genomic models explaining the peopling of the Americas.

Keywords: Ice-Free Corridor; Paleoindian technology; cladistics; geometric morphometrics; peopling of the Americas.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.