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Author Topic: 9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered  (Read 389 times)

Offline Mojostick

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9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered
« on: April 30, 2014, 09:24:00 AM »
This is really interesting stuff...

  http://www.lansingstatejournal.com/article/20140429/NEWS01/304290010/Ancient-hunting-camp-found-beneath-Lake-Huron?nclick_check=1  

Ancient hunting camp found beneath Lake Huron

Deep below the surface of Lake Huron, scuba-diving researchers have found an elaborate network of hunting blinds and animal-herding structures dating back roughly 9,000 years.

Lake levels of the day were some 250 feet lower, exposing a narrow bridge of land running from one side of Huron to the other. Prehistoric people evidently thought this isthmus was a perfect place to intercept caribou on their seasonal migrations. The hunting site they built, now inundated, opens a window onto prehistoric America and provides valuable evidence in a region where such artifacts are practically non-existent.

If the hunting structures “were on solid ground, (they) probably would’ve been bulldozed away for a Walmart parking lot by now,” says archaeologist Alan Osborn of the University of Nebraska-Omaha and the University of Nebraska State Museum, who was not part of the discovery team. Underwater archaeology is expensive, but “in this case, it’s revealing a site that’s in pretty much pristine condition.”

Serendipity, the researcher’s friend, is to thank for this discovery as well. A half-dozen years ago, the federal government published new maps showing Lake Huron’s underwater ridge, which runs from northeastern Michigan to southern Ontario, as archaeologist John O’Shea was reading a book about Siberian reindeer herders, who laid down brush to direct their animals’ path. O’Shea, of the University of Michigan’s Museum of Anthropological Archaeology, and his colleagues decided to take a long shot and look for similar features on Huron’s underwater ridge.

With the help of sonar, a remote-controlled underwater vehicle and scuba divers, O’Shea’s team eventually found a complicated system of submerged structures at a point where the caribou’s spring and fall migration paths would’ve crossed. In the fall, caribou heading south along the land bridge would’ve made their way straight into a simple cluster of stone hunting blinds.

But animals heading north in the spring marched into a much more systematic form of ambush. The site’s architects carefully placed two parallel lines of boulders to outline a path 26 feet wide and 100 feet long. Caribou naturally follow lines, O’Shea says, so they would’ve walked along this “drive lane” only to hit a dead end created by a natural stone wall. Meanwhile hunters could hide in another clutch of stone hunting blinds built along the lane. The ground here was littered with debris from the manufacture or repair of stone tools, probably spear points, the researchers say in this week’s issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The site speaks to the seasonal pattern of the earliest Americans’ lives, O’Shea says. People probably didn’t live on the isthmus. But in the spring, numerous families would’ve congregated at the drive lane, which required perhaps 15 or 16 hunters to operate.

“That doesn’t sound like a huge number, but if these people are living in small family groups most of the year, that’s a pretty significant aggregation,” O’Shea says. People would have socialized as well as hunted before dispersing, he says. Smaller groups would’ve gathered to use the fall hunting blinds. Other prehistoric sites — though none in the Great Lakes — boast similar innovations.

The researchers make a “compelling case,” says Leland Bement of the Oklahoma Archaeological Survey, who was not affiliated with the study team. The site, he says via e-mail, “provides another example of the skill and level of organization of big-game hunters in North America … and the ability of the hunters to plan and execute strategies to intercept these animals.” The find also shows that it’s possible to gain valuable results from underwater exploration, he says.

Such experience may come in handy as researchers try to chart the paths of the first Americans. It’s likely that archaeological sites from the time are submerged, and O’Shea says the new discovery shows the value of underwater searches.

“In the Great Lakes, there was no evidence of what (early Americans) were doing at all,” he says. “By looking in the right place we were able to find them.”

   

Offline Mojostick

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Re: 9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered
« Reply #1 on: April 30, 2014, 09:30:00 AM »
Another article...
 http://www.natureworldnews.com/articles/6800/20140429/archaeologists-find-9-000-year-old-hunting-drive-lane-under.htm

Archaeologists have found a 9,000-year-old caribou hunting drive lane under the Lake Huron. The hunting site is expected to provide insight into the culture and economy of the people living in the Great Lakes region.

According to the researchers at the University of Michigan's Museum of Anthropology, the main feature of the hunting site called "Drop 45 Drive Lane" is the most elaborate structure in the area.

The ancient site was found 121 feet under water, about 35 miles southeast of Alpena. The region, according to researchers, was once a strip of dry land that connected northeast Michigan to southern Ontario.


"This site and its associated artifacts, along with environmental and simulation studies, suggest that Late Paleoindian/Early Archaic caribou hunters employed distinctly different seasonal approaches," said John O'Shea, the Emerson F. Greenman Professor of Anthropological Archaeology and lead author of the article. "In autumn, small groups carried out the caribou hunts, and in spring, larger groups of hunters cooperated."

The hunting drive was made of limestone and had two parallel lines of stone leading to a dead-end. The drive even had circular hunting blinds that were built to obstruct the movement of the caribou.

The orientation of Drop 45 shows that the drive was used to hunt animals during autumn as well as spring.

"It is noteworthy that V-shaped hunting blinds located upslope from Drop 45 are oriented to intercept animals moving to the southeast in the autumn," O'Shea said in a news release. "This concentration of differing types of hunting structures associated with alternative seasons of migration is consistent with caribou herd movement simulation data indicating that the area was a convergence point along different migration routes, where the landform tended to compress the animals in both the spring and autumn."

According to O'Shea, chipped stone debris used for repairing stone tools, show that the hunting drive was made by a large group of people.

The study is published in the journal the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Offline mike g

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Re: 9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered
« Reply #2 on: April 30, 2014, 09:34:00 AM »
Very interesting.
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Offline mmgrode

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Re: 9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered
« Reply #3 on: April 30, 2014, 10:25:00 AM »
Fascinating.  Thanks for posting this, Bob.  Shows the ingenuity and resourcefulness of primitive peoples.  I've read of similar funneling structures built by tribes in the Rockies.  Ingenious when you think about it...funnel them into a corral of sorts and have several blinds surrounding it to shoot from.  Multiple shots at each animal as it tries to find it's way out.
"We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit."  Aristotle

Offline Greyfox54

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Re: 9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered
« Reply #4 on: April 30, 2014, 02:25:00 PM »
Most interesting , thanks for sharing !
Greyfox54

Offline Jerry Jeffer

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Re: 9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered
« Reply #5 on: April 30, 2014, 04:49:00 PM »
I just saw a show about the Great Lakes on one of the science channels. They talked about this research and showed some of the rock lines. Really cool stuff.
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Offline Casper

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Re: 9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered
« Reply #6 on: April 30, 2014, 05:04:00 PM »
thanks for sharing, it was a most interesting read

Offline jkm97

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Re: 9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered
« Reply #7 on: April 30, 2014, 08:01:00 PM »
Great read, will share with my students tomorrow.

Offline monterey

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Re: 9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered
« Reply #8 on: April 30, 2014, 09:08:00 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by mmgrode:
Fascinating.  Thanks for posting this, Bob.  Shows the ingenuity and resourcefulness of primitive peoples.  I've read of similar funneling structures built by tribes in the Rockies.  Ingenious when you think about it...funnel them into a corral of sorts and have several blinds surrounding it to shoot from.  Multiple shots at each animal as it tries to find it's way out.
wonder, would this have been done with spears, atlatls or.......?
Monterey

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Online chinook907

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Re: 9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered
« Reply #9 on: May 01, 2014, 12:51:00 AM »
"Have I not commanded you ? Be strong and courageous.  Do not be terrified; do not be discouraged, for the Lord your God will be with you wherever you go." Joshua 1:9

Offline manitou1

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Re: 9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered
« Reply #10 on: May 01, 2014, 07:04:00 AM »
Thank God for modern blinds! I am glad I don't have to roll around big rocks to form a hunting structure.  :-)   Pretty ingenius.
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Offline Roger Norris

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Re: 9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered
« Reply #11 on: May 01, 2014, 11:39:00 AM »
Awesome!
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Offline Scott E

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Re: 9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered
« Reply #12 on: May 02, 2014, 01:03:00 PM »
Cool!
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Offline Mojostick

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Re: 9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered
« Reply #13 on: May 02, 2014, 02:03:00 PM »
What else is interesting is how much "climate change" has occurred in a mere 9000 years. While 9000 years may seem like a long time, it isn't but a click of the clock, in the grand scheme.

Some 9000 years ago, the planet had a human population of only some 5,000,000 people. Only a fraction of those would have been in the Great Lakes region.

Given that we only began to have a crude understanding of meteorology in the 1700's and we didn't start getting into what we consider more "modern" thought, understanding and record keeping of weather until the late 1800's, it's amazing how much the Great Lakes have changed in such a short span of time, pre-industrial revolution/fossil fuels to boot (LOL), and how little we still know of the history of the Lakes region. It appears that the Great Lakes filled roughly in the same era as when the English Channel formed and when Australia was separated from New Guinea.

Offline Bjorn

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Re: 9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered
« Reply #14 on: May 02, 2014, 04:21:00 PM »
What Mojostick wrote plus the Mediterranean filled in roughly the same period that the Great Lakes filled. The climate changed way more before the blast furnace than afterwards yet we are bearing the brunt of the current 'scientific' explanations!   :banghead:    :laughing:

Offline RedShaft

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Re: 9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered
« Reply #15 on: May 02, 2014, 11:18:00 PM »
Very neat thanks for posting. Kinda how we do it in Pa ha ha! There are so many guys in the woods the deer bump into them all and come running right to my blind in the thick stuff.
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Offline Wudstix

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Re: 9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered
« Reply #16 on: May 10, 2014, 03:51:00 PM »
Great stuff, like to see how it was done way back in the day.
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Offline Tedd

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Re: 9000 year old hunting "camp" discovered
« Reply #17 on: May 11, 2014, 08:07:00 AM »
Can you imagine, being there when the the blinds were being used?

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