This article was copied from FoxNews.com to preserve it for our readers. It will most likely disappear from that website soon. Notice the mention of horse and camel bones found in the cave.
Fossilized
human feces hints at long-lost, 13,500-year-old West Coast culture
By
Gene J.
Koprowski Published July 12, 2012 FoxNews.com
Maybe
the 1992 movie Brendan Fraser film Encino Man wasn’t too far from the
mark?
Fossilized
human feces and other evidence from a West Coast cave demonstrates the
existence of a long-lost, 13,500-year-old American culture, scientists said
Thursday.
The
fossilized feces, known to researchers as a coprolite, from the Paisley Caves
in Oregon has turned assumptions about the history of the Americas on its ear.
“Coprolites
are as good as a human skeleton,” Dr. Thomas Stafford, Jr. of Stafford Research
Laboratories said during a briefing for science journalists. This particular
one left him stunned.
Archaeologists
and paleontologists had long thought that a culture called Clovis once
inhabited New Mexico, basing that belief on evidence from arrowheads and spear
points carved in a certain way. Clovis was long regarded as the New World’s
first inhabitants.
Stafford
believes the newfound coprolite suggests that the Oregon cave dwellers who
lived here so long ago and the other, pre-historic humans at Clovis were “contemporaneous
and parallel” -- a finding that rewrites history in North America.
Parallel Lives
'Coprolites
are as good as a human skeleton.- Dr. Thomas Stafford, Jr.
Dr.
Dennis Jenkins, lead author of the paper and an archaeologist with the University
of Oregon, said that four years ago, when he and his team first published its
research on the Paisley Caves, they had “very few artifacts” as evidence for
the existence of the Western Stem People, the name researchers have given to
the Oregon cave dwellers.
“That
raised questions about the veracity of our findings,” he said. “We were looking
at human life, but we wondered if it was possible the DNA reached us through
contamination or leaching.”
In
a 2011 dig, he set out to recover more artifacts and prove that DNA evidence
there was not contaminated by water, rodents or other means, Jenkins said. The
team conducted a stratographic and chronological analysis of the cave and its
contents.
“We
separated any extraneous carbon that may have attached itself to the
artifacts,” said Jenkins.
Another
researcher on this project, Dr. Eske Willerslev of the University of
Copenhagen, noted that during the first dig, scientists did not wear rubber
gloves. So this time, they also screened for the possibility that their own DNA
from sweat, hair and skin may have contaminated the site.
Researchers
then dated each fiber they found containing human DNA.
“We
did that 12 times,” Jenkins said. “In general, the coprolite was younger than
the extraneous carbon. We also demonstrated that by taking radio carbon dates
at four centimeter intervals.”
Radiocarbon
dating is highly precise, and determined that the humans lived in the cave
13,000 to 13,500 years ago.
In
addition to the human DNA remains, archeologists found arrowheads used for
hunting by the cave dwellers. Camel and horse remains were found in the caves
too, as was duck’s blood.
This group is a unique techno-culture, the
researchers said, who had their own style of arrowhead making different from
that used by the Clovis people. Scientists still have a long way to go in
discerning the way these cavemen lived, as they do not know what language they
spoke, or how they socially organized their culture.
The scientists plan to examine the fossilized
feces further to determine the diet of the cave dwellers, and to examine the
intestinal bacteria preserved within it, which will give additional clues to
the cave puzzle. From this data, science may be able to determine if these
people were hunters or gatherers.
“At this moment, we have no baseline of what
their gut flora was like,” Willerslev said. “This is a brilliant opportunity to
explore this.”
Gut flora aid in human digestion -- they're
known in medicine as “good bacteria.”
Searching through fossilized feces in the
Snake River next to Hell’s Canyon may not sound like fun for many, but that
sort of work is a trusted technique for archeologists.
“What archeologists deal with mostly is
garbage,” said Jenkins.
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