First Americans hunted largest game through Western Hemisphere

New research led by a 乐虎直播 archaeologist reveals that the earliest Native Americans had highly specialized diets, primarily hunting the largest animals on the landscape, and they targeted these megafauna consistently from 乐虎直播 to South America.

Infographic map of the Western Hemisphere titled "Paleoindian Megaherbivore Specialization," showing the geographic ranges and diets of three early human cultures 鈥 East Beringian, Clovis, and Fishtail Projectile Point 鈥 alongside silhouettes of hunted megafauna including woolly mammoths, Columbian mammoths, gomphotheres, and giant ground sloths.
Image created by Ben Potter
A map and dietary analysis showing how three Paleoindian cultures 鈥 East Beringian, Clovis and Fishtail Projectile Point 鈥 specialized in hunting megaherbivores across the Western Hemisphere between roughly 14,000 and 11,600 years ago.

The study, published today in , examined data from 50 archaeological sites excavated throughout the Americas. An international team of researchers from the U.S., Canada and Argentina analyzed animal bones at campsites and identified species, grouped by how much food they provided. UAF anthropology professor Ben Potter and McMaster University researcher James Chatters led the study. 

What they discovered addresses one of archaeology's most contested questions: How did humans spread so rapidly across two continents?

鈥淥ne of two competing ideas is dietary generalization: exploiting a wide variety of resources that would differ based on region,鈥 said Potter. 鈥淭he other is megafaunal specialization: focusing on just a few large-bodied prey.鈥

The study focused on three of the earliest and most widespread cultural groups in the Americas: Eastern Beringians in 乐虎直播 and the Yukon, Clovis people across North America and Fishtail Projectile Point people in South America. Within those groups, the researchers concluded that 83% to 88% of their food came from massive plant-eaters such as mammoths, elephant-like gomphotheres and giant ground sloths, collectively known as megaherbivores.

In order to reach that conclusion, scientists looked at a variety of data. Bones from prey animals at each of the excavation sites showed what people were eating. They then calculated  which and how many animals  鈥 large and small 鈥 could be expected to live in the nearby landscape. To account for body size, the team multiplied individual animal counts by each species' estimated edible biomass. Even when the researchers artificially inflated small-animal counts in their models as a test, megaherbivores still accounted for the overwhelming majority of available food.

"The test of dietary specialization isn't just how many of a given animal you find at an ancient campsite," Potter said. "It's what the record looks like relative to natural abundance. If early people were dietary generalists, you'd expect to find the most common animals would be more common in peoples鈥 campsites.鈥 

Instead, they found the opposite. 

鈥淎nimals like mammoths and ground sloths, which were actually quite rare in the landscape, completely dominate the archaeological record,鈥 he said. 鈥淩abbits and mice, which would have been everywhere, barely register."

Artist's watercolor reconstruction of Clovis behaviors around 13,000 years ago. Two women, one holding an infant, consume mammoth meat near a hearth. A man in the foreground is working on stone projectiles. In the background, several adults butcher a juvenile and an adult mammoth. Several large dogs, similar to huskies, beg for meat.
Eric Carlson
An artist鈥檚 reconstruction of Clovis life 13,000 years ago shows the Anzick-1 infant with his mother consuming mammoth meat near a hearth. Another individual crafts tools, including dart projectile points and atlatls. A mammoth butchery area is visible nearby.

Potter said the focus on large herbivores for food also explains why the early toolkits appear very similar from California to Maine to Florida, and at sites in South America. People hunting the same kind of animal across radically different landscapes had no need to adapt their technology to local conditions. The tools found at the archaeological sites included implements for hunting large game, such as large fluted projectile points and specialized butchering implements. Fishing gear and plant-processing tools were notably absent. 

This focus on hunting large prey also explains the rapid expansion of humans from 乐虎直播 through South America, the study finds. 

When hunter-gatherers move into unfamiliar territory, they typically need generations to learn the new landscape, how to effectively hunt local small and medium-sized game, and which local plants are edible. 

Building a diet around large mammals changes that dynamic. 

鈥淢ammoths, for example, can cover a tremendous range and occupy vast territories,鈥 said  study co-author Mat Wooller, a professor at UAF. 鈥淚n effect, specialist hunter-gatherers used their knowledge of megaherbivores, like mammoths, to expand successfully across the continents rather than learning about each localized ecosystem they encountered."

The study also found that the timing of megafauna extinctions tracks with human arrival, not all at once, but like a wave moving southward down the continents. 

In 乐虎直播, mammoths and horses disappeared around 13,300 years ago, at the end of the earliest known human occupation there. Clovis-era megafauna in North America were gone by 12,800 years ago,and gomphotheres and giant ground sloths survived in South America until about 11,600 years ago.

Potter said the same sequence of arrival, overlap and extinction played out again and again, each time a little further south, making a strong circumstantial case for human hunting as a major contributing factor to megafauna extinction, compounded by climate change, which could have reduced their habitat, making them more susceptible to hunting pressure. 

鈥淢egaherbivores reproduce slowly, space births widely and, as adults, have no natural predators,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey would have had no learned wariness of new, technologically sophisticated human hunter-gatherer populations.鈥

Members of the research team include Potter, Chatters and Wooller; Luciano Prates of Universidad Nacional de la Plata, Argentina; S. Ivan Perez of Museo Hist贸rico y Arqueol贸gico, CONICET, Argentina; Todd Surovell and Robert Kelly of the University of Wyoming; and Gustavo Politis of Universidad Nacional del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires, Argentina.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Ben Potter, bapotter@alaska.edu, 907-474-7567; Mat Wooller, mjwooller@alaska.edu, 907-474-6738

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