Beringia and the peopling of the Western Hemisphere

Author:

Hoffecker John F.12ORCID,Elias Scott A.1ORCID,Scott G. Richard3ORCID,O'Rourke Dennis H.2ORCID,Hlusko Leslea J.45ORCID,Potapova Olga678ORCID,Pitulko Vladimir910ORCID,Pavlova Elena11ORCID,Bourgeon Lauriane12ORCID,Vachula Richard S.13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309, USA

2. Department of Anthropology, University of Kansas, 622 Fraser Hall, 1415 Jayhawk Blvd, Lawrence, KS 66045, USA

3. Department of Anthropology, University of Nevada-Reno, 1664 N. Virginia Street, Reno, NV 89557, USA

4. Human Evolution Research Center, University of California-Berkeley, 3101 Valley Life Sciences Building, Berkeley, CA 94720-3140, USA

5. Centro Nacional de Investigación sobre la Evolución Humana (CENIEH), Burgos, Spain

6. Pleistocene Park Foundation, Philadelphia, PA 19006, USA

7. Department of Mammoth Fauna Studies, Academy of Sciences of Sakha, Yakutsk, Russia

8. The Mammoth Site of Hot Springs, Hot Springs, SD 57747, USA

9. Institute of the History of Material Culture, Russian Academy of Sciences, Dvortsovaya nab., 18, 191186 St Petersburg, Russia

10. Peter the Great Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography (Kunstkamera), Russian Academy of Sciences, 3, Universitetskaya nab., St Petersburg 199034, Russian Federation

11. Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute, Russian Federal Service for Hydrometeorology and Environmental Monitoring, 38 Bering Street, 199397 St Petersburg, Russia

12. Kansas Geological Survey, University of Kansas, 1930 Constant Ave., Lawrence, KS 66047, USA

13. Department of Geosciences, Auburn University, 2050 Beard Eaves Coliseum, Auburn, AL 36849-5305, USA

Abstract

Did Beringian environments represent an ecological barrier to humans until less than 15 000 years ago or was access to the Americas controlled by the spatial–temporal distribution of North American ice sheets? Beringian environments varied with respect to climate and biota, especially in the two major areas of exposed continental shelf. The East Siberian Arctic Shelf (‘Great Arctic Plain’ (GAP)) supported a dry steppe-tundra biome inhabited by a diverse large-mammal community, while the southern Bering-Chukchi Platform (‘Bering Land Bridge’ (BLB)) supported mesic tundra and probably a lower large-mammal biomass. A human population with west Eurasian roots occupied the GAP before the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and may have accessed mid-latitude North America via an interior ice-free corridor. Re-opening of the corridor less than 14 000 years ago indicates that the primary ancestors of living First Peoples, who already had spread widely in the Americas at this time, probably dispersed from the NW Pacific coast. A genetic ‘arctic signal’ in non-arctic First Peoples suggests that their parent population inhabited the GAP during the LGM, before their split from the former. We infer a shift from GAP terrestrial to a subarctic maritime economy on the southern BLB coast before dispersal in the Americas from the NW Pacific coast.

Funder

Russian Science Foundation

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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