الهنود العتاق
هنود عتاق يصطادون أخدوديات الأسنان هاينرش هاردر (1858–1935)، ح.1920. الشعوب الحجرية أو الهنود العتاق هم أول مستوطنون معروفون للأمريكتين. اشتق اسم الفترة من ظهور الأدوات الحجرية ذات "النصل المدبب". |
الهنود العتاق Paleo-Indians، Paleoindians، أو الأمريكان العتاق Paleoamericans، هو مصطلح تصنيف أطلقه الباحثون على الشعوب الأولى التي دخلت، ولاحقاً استوطنت، الأمريكتين أثناء الفترات الجليدية الأخيرة من نطاق الپلایستوسين المتأخر. سابقة "paleo-" مشتقة من الصفة اليونانية palaios (παλαιός)، وتعني "القديم" أو "العتيق". يطلق مصطلح "الهنود العتاق" بشكل خاص على الفترة الحجرية في نصف الكرة الغربي ويجب التمييز بينه وبين مصطلح "العصر الحجري القديم Paleolithic.[1]
تقترح النظريات التقليدية أن صيادو الحيوانات الضخمة قد عبروا مضيق برنگ من شمال آسيا إلى الأمريكتين على الجسر البري-و-الجليدي (برينگيا). كان هذا الجسر قائماً من 45.000-12.000 ح.ع (47.000-14.000 ق.ح.).[2] هاجرت جماعات معزولة صغيرة من الصيادين وجامعي الثمار برفقة قطعان من آكلات العشب الضخمة بعيداً نحو آلاسكا. من ح. 16.500-13.500 ح.ع. (ح. 18.500-15.500 ح.ع.)، وتطورت الأروقة الخالية من الجليد على امتداد ساحل المحيط الهادي ووديان أمريكا الشمالية.[3] سمح هذا للحيوانات، وخلفها البشر، بالهجرة جنوباً نحو الأراضي الداخلية من القارة. مضى البشر مشياً على الأقدام أو مستخدمين الزوارق البدائية على امتداد الشريط الساحلي. التواريخ والطرق الدقيقة لاستيطان العالم الجديد لا تزال محل جدل مستمر.[4]
الأدوات الحجرية، وخاصة projectile points، والمكاشط، تعتبر دليلاً أساسياً على النشاط البشري المبكر في الأمريكتين. يستخدم علماء الآثار وعلماء الإنسان والأدوات الحجرية ذات النصل المدبب لتصنيف الفترات الثقافية.[5] يربط الدليل العلمي الأمريكان الأصليين بالمجموعات السكانية السيبيرية الشرقية. اتصلت الشعوب الأصلية في الأمريكتين مع الجماعات السكانية السيبيرية عن طريق العوامل اللغوية، انتشار فصائل الدم، وفي التركيب الوراثي الذي ينعكس من خلال البيانات الجزيئية، مثل الدنا.[6] يوجد دليل على حدوث هجرتين منفصلتين على الأقل.[7] من 8000-7000 ح.ع. (10.000-9.000 ع.ح.) أدى استقرار المناخ إلى ارتفاع عدد السكان وتطور التقنية الحجرية، مما أدى إلى نمط حياة أكثر تحضراً.
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الهجرة إلى الأمريكتين
Researchers continue to study and discuss the specifics of Paleo-Indian migration to and throughout the Americas, including the exact dates and routes traveled.[9] The traditional theory holds that these early migrants moved into Beringia between eastern Siberia and present-day Alaska 17,000 years ago,[10] at a time when the Quaternary glaciation significantly lowered sea levels.[11] These people are believed to have followed herds of now-extinct pleistocene megafauna along ice-free corridors that stretched between the Laurentide and Cordilleran ice sheets.[12] An alternative proposed scenario involves migration - either on foot or using boats - down the Pacific coast to South America.[13] Evidence of the latter would have been submerged by a sea-level rise of more than a hundred meters following the end of the last glacial period.[14]
The time range of the peopling of the Americas remains a source of substantial debate. Conventional estimates have it that humans reached North America at some point between 15,000 and 20,000 years ago.[15][16][17][18] The few areas of agreement achieved to date are the origin from Central Asia, with widespread habitation of the Americas during the end of the last glacial period, or more specifically what is known as the late glacial maximum, around 16,000–13,000 years before present.[10][19]
التقسيم إلى فترات
Sites in Alaska (East Beringia) are where some of the earliest evidence has been found of Paleo-Indians,[20][21][22] followed by archaeological sites in northern British Columbia, western Alberta and the Old Crow Flats region in the Yukon.[23] The Paleo-Indian would eventually flourish all over the Americas.[24] These peoples were spread over a wide geographical area; thus there were regional variations in lifestyles. However, all the individual groups shared a common style of stone tool production, making knapping styles and progress identifiable.[22] This early Paleo-Indian period's lithic reduction tool adaptations have been found across the Americas, utilized by highly mobile bands consisting of approximately 20 to 60 members of an extended family.[25][26] Food would have been plentiful during the few warm months of the year. Lakes and rivers were teeming with many species of fish, birds and aquatic mammals. Nuts, berries and edible roots could be found in the forests and marshes. The fall would have been a busy time because foodstuffs would have to be stored and clothing made ready for the winter. During the winter, coastal fishing groups moved inland to hunt and trap fresh food and furs.[27]
Late ice-age climatic changes caused plant communities and animal populations to change.[28] Groups moved from place to place and sought new supplies as preferred resources were depleted.[24] Small bands utilized hunting and gathering during the spring and summer months, then broke into smaller direct family groups for the fall and winter. Family groups moved every 3–6 days, possibly traveling up to 360 km (220 mi) a year.[29][30] Diets were often sustaining and rich in protein due to successful hunting. Clothing was made from a variety of animal hides that were also used for shelter construction.[31] During much of the Early and Middle Paleo-Indian periods, inland bands are thought to have subsisted primarily through hunting now-extinct megafauna.[24] Large Pleistocene mammals were the giant beaver, steppe wisent, musk ox, mastodons, woolly mammoths and ancient reindeer (early caribou).[32]
The Clovis culture, appearing around 11,500 BCE (ح. 13,500 BP),[33] did not rely exclusively on megafauna for subsistence.[34] Instead, they employed a mixed foraging strategy that included smaller terrestrial game, aquatic animals, and a variety of flora.[35] Paleo-Indian groups were efficient hunters and carried a variety of tools. These included highly efficient fluted-style spear points, as well as microblades used for butchering and hide processing.[36] Projectile points and hammerstones made from many sources are found traded or moved to new locations.[37] Stone tools were traded and/or left behind from North Dakota and Northwest Territories, to Montana and Wyoming.[38] Trade routes also have been found from the British Columbia Interior to the coast of California.[38]
The glaciers that covered the northern half of the continent began to gradually melt, exposing new land for occupation around 17,500–14,500 years ago.[28] At the same time as this was occurring, worldwide extinctions among the large mammals began. In North America, camelids and equids eventually died off, the latter not to reappear on the continent until the Spanish reintroduced the horse near the end of the 15th century CE.[39] As the Quaternary extinction event was happening, the Late Paleo-Indians would have relied more on other means of subsistence.[40]
From ح. 10,500 BCE (ح. 12,500 BP), the broad-spectrum big game hunters of the Great Plains began to focus on a single animal species: the bison (an early cousin of the American bison).[41] The earliest known of these bison-oriented hunting traditions is the Folsom tradition. Folsom peoples traveled in small family groups for most of the year, returning yearly to the same springs and other favored locations on higher ground.[42] There they would camp for a few days, perhaps erecting a temporary shelter, making and/or repairing some stone tools, or processing some meat, then moving on.[41] Paleo-Indians were not numerous and population densities were quite low.[43]
التبويب
Paleo-Indians are generally classified by lithic reduction or lithic core "styles" and by regional adaptations.[22][44] Lithic technology fluted spear points, like other spear points, are collectively called projectile points. The projectiles are constructed from chipped stones that have a long groove called a "flute". The spear points would typically be made by chipping a single flake from each side of the point.[45] The point was then tied onto a spear of wood or bone. As the environment changed due to the ice age ending around 17–13 Ka BP on short, and around 25–27 Ka BP on the long,[46] many animals migrated overland to take advantage of the new sources of food. Humans following these animals, such as bison, mammoth and mastodon, thus gained the name big-game hunters.[47] Pacific coastal groups of the period would have relied on fishing as the prime source of sustenance.[48]
Archaeologists are piecing together evidence that the earliest human settlements in North America were thousands of years before the appearance of the current Paleo-Indian time frame (before the late glacial maximum 20,000-plus years ago).[49] Evidence indicates that people were living as far east as northern Yukon, in the glacier-free zone called Beringia before 30,000 BCE (32,000 BP).[50][51] Until recently, it was generally believed that the first Paleo-Indian people to arrive in North America belonged to the Clovis culture. This archaeological phase was named after the city of Clovis, New Mexico, where in 1936 unique Clovis points were found in situ at the site of Blackwater Draw, where they were directly associated with the bones of Pleistocene animals.[52]
Recent data from a series of archaeological sites throughout the Americas suggest that Clovis (thus the "Paleo-Indians") time range should be re-examined. In particular, sites located near Cooper's Ferry in Idaho,[53] Cactus Hill in Virginia,[54] Meadowcroft Rockshelter in Pennsylvania,[55] Bear Spirit Mountain in West Virginia,[56] Catamarca and Salta in Argentina,[57] Pilauco and Monte Verde in Chile,[58][59] Topper in South Carolina,[60] and Quintana Roo in Mexico[61][62] have generated early dates for wide-ranging Paleo-Indian occupation. Some sites significantly predate the migration time frame of ice-free corridors, thus suggesting that there were additional coastal migration routes available, traversed either on foot and/or in boats.[63] Geological evidence suggests the Pacific coastal route was open for overland travel before 23,000 years ago and after 16,000 years ago.[64]
أمريكا الجنوبية
In South America, the site of Monte Verde indicates that its population was probably territorial and resided in their river basin for most of the year. Some other South American groups, on the other hand, were highly mobile and hunted big-game animals such as gomphotheres and giant sloths. They used classic bifacial projectile point technology.
The primary examples are populations associated with El Jobo points (Venezuela), fish-tail or Magallanes points (various parts of the continent, but mainly the southern half), and Paijan points (Peru and Ecuador) at sites in grasslands, savanna plains, and patchy forests.[65]
The dating for these sites ranges from ح. 14,000 BP (for Taima-Taima in Venezuela) to ح. 10,000 BP.[66] The bi-pointed El Jobo projectile points were mostly distributed in north-western Venezuela; from the Gulf of Venezuela to the high mountains and valleys. The population using them were hunter-gatherers that seemed to remain within a certain circumscribed territory.[67][68] El Jobo points were probably the earliest, going back to ح. 14,200 BP and they were used for hunting large mammals.[69] In contrast, the fish-tail points, dating to c. 11,000 B.P. in Patagonia, had a much wider geographical distribution, but mostly in the central and southern part of the continent.[70][71]
علم الوراثة العتيق
The haplogroup most commonly associated with Amerindian genetics is Haplogroup Q-M3.[73] Y-DNA, like (mtDNA), differs from other nuclear chromosomes in that the majority of the Y chromosome is unique and does not recombine during meiosis. This allows the historical pattern of mutations to be easily studied.[74] The pattern indicates Indigenous Amerindians experienced two very distinctive genetic episodes: first with the initial peopling of the Americas, and secondly with European colonization of the Americas.[75] The former is the determinant factor for the number of gene lineages and founding haplotypes present in today's Indigenous Amerindian populations.[76]
Human settlement of the Americas occurred in stages from the Bering sea coast line, with an initial layover on Beringia for the founding population.[77][78][79][80] The micro-satellite diversity and distributions of the Y lineage specific to South America indicates that certain Amerindian populations have been isolated since the initial colonization of the region.[81] The Na-Dené, Inuit and Indigenous Alaskan populations, however, exhibit haplogroup Q (Y-DNA) mutations that are distinct from other Amerindians with various mtDNA mutations.[82][83][84] This suggests that the earliest migrants into the northern extremes of North America and Greenland derived from later migrant populations.[85]
Evidence from full genomic studies suggests that the first people in the Americas diverged from Ancient East Asians about 36,000 years ago and expanded northwards into Siberia, where they encountered and interacted with a different Paleolithic Siberian population (known as Ancient North Eurasians), giving rise to both Paleosiberian peoples and Ancient Native Americans, which later migrated towards the Beringian region, became isolated from other populations, and subsequently populated the Americas.[86][87]
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الانتقال إلى الفترة العتيقة
The Archaic period in the Americas saw a changing environment featuring a warmer, more arid climate and the disappearance of the last megafauna.[88] The majority of population groups at this time were still highly mobile hunter-gatherers, but now individual groups started to focus on resources available to them locally. Thus with the passage of time there is a pattern of increasing regional generalization like the Southwest, Arctic, Poverty, Dalton, and Plano traditions. These regional adaptations would become the norm, with reliance less on hunting and gathering, and a more mixed economy of small game, fish, seasonally wild vegetables, and harvested plant foods.[30][89] Many groups continued to hunt big game but their hunting traditions became more varied and meat procurement methods more sophisticated.[28] The placement of artifacts and materials within an Archaic burial site indicated social differentiation based upon status in some groups.[90]
انظر أيضاً
- منطقة الهنود العتاق، مقاطعة آدم – (موقع أثري)
- إنسان أرلنگتون سپرنگز – (رفات بشرية)
- بلاكتووتر درو – (موقع أثري)
- موقع بحيرة بوراكس – (موقع أثري)
- امرأة بول – (رفات بشرية)
- موقع الإنسان المبكر في كاليكو – (موقع أثري)
- الكهف الصحري المرسوم – (موقع أثري)
- مجمع كودي - (مجموعة ثقافية)
- كهف دى لاس مانوس – (رسوم كهوف)
- موقع إيست فورك – (موقع أثري)
- كهف فورت روك – (موقع أثري)
- موقع هيسكوك – (موقع أثري)
- موقع لنر ماموث-كيل – (موقع أثري)
- موقع لندنماير – (موقع أثري)
- امرأة لوزيا – (رفات بشرية)
- مارمز، الملجأ الصخري - (موقع أثري)
- موقع ماستودون التاريخي الولائي – (موقع أثري)
- كهف المومياء – (موقع أثري)
- نايا – (رفات بشرية)
- كهوف پيسلي – (موقع أثري)
- امرأة پنون – (رفات بشرية)
- نمط پوست – (موقع أثري)
- مجمع سان دييگويتو – (موقع أثري)
- موقع نهر أپوارد صن – (موقع أثري)
- هايتم – (موقع أثري)
- موقع كواد – (موقع أثري)
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Archaeological evidence, in fact, recognizes that people started to leave Beringia for the New World around 40,000 years ago, but rapid expansion into North America didn't occur until about 15,000 years ago, when the ice had literally broken
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- ^ José R. Oliver, Implications of Taima-taima and the Peopling of Northern South America. Archived 2016-04-25 at the Wayback Machine bradshawfoundation.com
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- ^ Silverman, Helaine; Isbell, William (2008). Handbook of South American Archaeology. Springer Science. p. 433. ISBN 978-0-387-75228-0.
- ^ Silverman, Helaine; Isbell, William (2008). Handbook of South American Archaeology. Springer Science. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-387-75228-0.
- ^ Dillehay, Thomas D. (2008). The Settlement of the Americas. Basic Books. p. 209. ISBN 978-0-7867-2543-4.
- ^ Balanovsky, Oleg; Gurianov, Vladimir; Zaporozhchenko, Valery; et al. (February 2017). "Phylogeography of human Y-chromosome haplogroup Q3-L275 from an academic/citizen science collaboration". BMC Evolutionary Biology. 17 (S1): 18. doi:10.1186/s12862-016-0870-2. PMC 5333174. PMID 28251872.
{{cite journal}}
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قراءات إضافية
- Jablonski, Nina G (2002). The First Americans: The Pleistocene Colonization of the New World. California Academy of Sciences. ISBN 978-0-940228-49-8.
- Peter Charles Hoffer (2006). The Brave New World: A History of Early America. JHU Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-8483-2.
- Meltzer, David J (2009). First peoples in a new world: colonizing ice age America. University of California, Berkeley. ISBN 978-0-520-25052-9.
وصلات خارجية
- Atlas of the Human Journey, Genographic Project, National Geographic
- Journey of Mankind - Genetic Map - Bradshaw Foundation
- The Paleoindian Period - United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service
- Alabama Archaeology: Prehistoric Alabama - The University of Alabama, Department of Archaeology
- The Paleoindian Database - The University of Tennessee, Department of Anthropology.
- Paleoindians and the Great Pleistocene Die-Off - American Academy of Arts and Sciences, National Humanities Center
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