Alaskan spear points raise new questions about human arrival in North America

The discovery of fluted spear points in northwest Alaska strongly suggests that early humans carrying American technology lived on the central Bering Land Bridge about 12,000 years ago, showing that peopling of the Americas was more complex than previously believed, according to a research team led by a Texas A&M University professor.

Alaskan spear points raise new questions about human arrival in North America
12,000-year-old fluted points found among the Serpentine Hot Springs
artifacts [Credit: Texas A&M University]
Ted Goebel, professor of anthropology, along with colleagues Mike Waters, Heather Smith and Kelly Graf, all associated with the Center for the Study of the First Americans at Texas A&M, and researchers from Baylor University, the University of Georgia, the National Park Service, the Bureau of Land Management and the Desert Research Institute have had their findings published in the online version of the Journal of Archaeological Science.

The project was funded by the National Science Foundation, the National Geographic Society, and National Park Service’s Shared Beringia Heritage Program.

The researchers focused on an area in Alaska called Serpentine Hot Springs, now part of the Bering Land Bridge National Preserve located on the Seward Peninsula. Park archaeologists in 2005 discovered a fragment of a fluted spear point, long known as a hallmark of North American Paleoindian cultures. Goebel and the team later excavated the site, finding more fluted points.

“This shows for sure that there were humans on the land bridge by the end of the Ice Age, 12,000 years ago, because the spear points were found with charcoal and bone radiocarbon dated to that time,” Goebel explains.

“Several of the spear points were found in our excavation along with charred animal bones, probably caribou which ancient humans butchered and ate there at the site.  So the question becomes, ‘Who were these people , and where did they come from?’”