Abstract

During the Pleistocene-Holocene transition at ~10.0 uncalibrated, or ~11.7 calibrated kya, the Americas were undoubtedly inhabited by humans from north to south ends. The groups living in that time had cultural and adaptive differences in terms of subsistence and technological pursuits. Particularly in the southern cone of South America, archaeological remains witnessed hunter-gatherers living at ~11.0 - 10.0 uncalibrated kya. They mostly used the so-called “fishtail,” or just “Fell” points, a widespread Paleo-American marker. Despite that, they exploited different faunal species, including extant and extinct fauna. At the Salto Department in the northwestern region of Uruguay, on the Itaperibí Grande creek shore, archaeological remains of bones and stones were recovered. One of the most remarkable is a fragmented fossil femur of Lestodon armatus, a mega-mammal giant ground sloth. In its anterior face, this specimen shows diverse kinds of marks. However, no clear association among the findings was documented. Then, in order to check the possible relationship between the bone and the artifacts, the specimen was subjected to radiocarbon dating and it was analyzed in detail from a taphonomic perspective to evaluate the origin of the marks. The radiocarbon assay indicates that the specimen belongs to the last millennium of the Pleistocene. The date is relevant as it is one of the few assays obtained on a sample from that time. The taphonomic study revealed that the marks were not produced by human activity, hence, its primary relationship with the stone artifacts is uncertain. Despite that, these data make an important contribution to the knowledge about the fauna contemporaneously living with the earliest hunter-gatherer that were foraging the regional landscape during one of the colonization events that populated the southern cone of South America.

Highlights

  • Diverse lines of investigations indicate that the human colonization of the Americas occurred during the Late Pleistocene, but in a time that is subject to debate (Meltzer, 2009; 2013)

  • The radiocarbon date and isotope values are relevant because it is one of the few assays obtained directly on a sample from Lestodon armatus with age spanning the last millennium of the Pleistocene

  • It agrees with the fact that several South American giant ground sloths died out during the Late Pleistocene-Early Holocene extinction, an event that eliminated most large mammals in the Americas (e.g. Barnosky et al, 2004; Haynes, 2009; Prescott et al, 2012)

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Summary

Introduction

Diverse lines of investigations indicate that the human colonization of the Americas occurred during the Late Pleistocene, but in a time that is subject to debate (Meltzer, 2009; 2013). The evidence provided by the archaeological record shows that there were cultural and adaptive differences in terms of subsistence and technological pursuits (Dillehay, 2009; Meltzer, 2009; Politis et al, 2008; 2019; Nami, 2014, 2019; Chichkoyan et al, 2017). In the southern cone of South America, the archaeological remains attest that foragers living ~11.0 - 10.0 uncalibrated kya used the “fishtail,” “Fell’s cave,” or “Fell” points (FP), a widespread Paleo-American (PA) marker. In spite of sharing similar projectile point shapes, the subsistence of the human groups using FPs in the southern cone exploited different faunal species, some of them living, and others that are extinct (Salemme & Miotti, 2008, Nami, 2014, 2019; Politis et al, 2019).

The Paleontological Finding and General Remarks
Taphonomic Observations
Radiocarbon Dating
Concluding Remarks
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