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.2018 May 30;4(5):eaar5040.
doi: 10.1126/sciadv.aar5040. eCollection 2018 May.

Deglaciation of the Pacific coastal corridor directly preceded the human colonization of the Americas

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Deglaciation of the Pacific coastal corridor directly preceded the human colonization of the Americas

Alia J Lesnek et al. Sci Adv..

Abstract

The route and timing of early human migration to the Americas have been a contentious topic for decades. Recent paleogenetic analyses suggest that the initial colonization from Beringia took place as early as 16 thousand years (ka) ago via a deglaciated corridor along the North Pacific coast. However, the feasibility of such a migration depends on the extent of the western Cordilleran Ice Sheet (CIS) and the available resources along the hypothesized coastal route during this timeframe. We date the culmination of maximum CIS conditions in southeastern Alaska, a potential bottleneck region for human migration, to ~20 to 17 ka ago with cosmogenic10Be exposure dating and14C dating of bones from an ice-overrun cave. We also show that productive marine and terrestrial ecosystems were established almost immediately following deglaciation. We conclude that CIS retreat ensured that an open and ecologically viable pathway through southeastern Alaska was available after 17 ka ago, which may have been traversed by early humans as they colonized the Americas.

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Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1. North American Ice Sheet extents and potential colonization pathways.
Extent of the Cordilleran and Laurentide ice sheets at 19 ka ago (white) and 15.5 ka ago. Areas of exposed continental shelf at 19 ka ago are shown in brown (6). Yellow stars indicate locations of offshore marine data discussed in the main text.
Fig. 2
Fig. 2. New10Be ages from southeastern Alaska.
Study region showing previously hypothesized CIS extent (white) and regions of potentially exposed continental shelf (solid gray; determined by subtracting 125 m from modern sea level) during the LGM (30). Sampling sites for10Be dating were selected within areas hypothesized by Carraraet al. (30) to have been ice-free during the LGM. Boulder (normal text) and bedrock (italicized text)10Be ages (thousand years; 1 SD external uncertainty) constrain CIS (black) and local deglaciation (blue) and demonstrate that sampling sites were not ice-free refugia. The location of Shuká Káa cave on Prince of Wales Island is marked with an orange star.
Fig. 3
Fig. 3. Climate records and key chronologies along the Pacific coast.
(A) Alkenone-derived sea surface temperature reconstruction from the Gulf of Alaska (36). (B) Ice-rafted debris from core MD0299, collected near Vancouver Island (23). (C) Composite diagram of individual10Be ages from southeastern Alaska (gray and light blue lines; this study), summed10Be ages for CIS deglaciation (black lines; this study), and local deglaciation (blue lines; this study). (D) Timing of the first pulse of human migration to the Americas [black square; (13)], the ecological opening of the inland corridor [purple triangle; (8)], and14C ages from Shuká Káa (dark green lines; this study) and other caves in southeastern Alaska (light green lines; this study). (E) Timeline of selected cave fauna from southeastern Alaska [(29); this study]. Dots represent the means of the total range of each calibrated14C age (this study). Vertical gray bar denotes the timing of maximum CIS extent in southeastern Alaska determined from the cave fauna14C ages and10Be ages reported in this study.
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References

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