Prehistoric humans not wiped out by comet, says researchers
Comet explosions did not end the prehistoric human culture, known as Clovis, in North America 13,000 years ago, according to research published in the journal Geophysical Monograph Series. Researchers from Royal Holloway university, together with Sandia National Laboratories and 13 other universities across the United States and Europe, have found evidence which rebuts the belief that a large impact or airburst caused a significant and abrupt change to Earth's climate and terminated the Clovis culture. They argue that other explanations must be found for the apparent disappearance.
Clovis is the name archaeologists have given to the earliest well-established human culture in the North American continent. It is named after the town in New Mexico, where distinct stone tools were found in the 1920s and 1930s.
Researchers argue that no appropriately sized impact craters from that time period have been discovered, and no shocked material or any other features of impact have been found in sediments. They also found that samples presented in support of the impact hypothesis were contaminated with modern material and that no physics model can support the theory.
"The theory has reached zombie status," said Professor Andrew Scott from the Department of Earth Sciences at Royal Holloway. "Whenever we are able to show flaws and think it is dead, it reappears with new, equally unsatisfactory, arguments.
"Hopefully new versions of the theory will be more carefully examined before they are published," he concluded.
Source: University of Royal Holloway London
Related
- No evidence for Clovis comet catastrophe, archaeologists sayWed, 29 Sep 2010, 16:42:54 EDT
- Artifacts in Texas predate Clovis culture by 2,500 years, new study showsThu, 24 Mar 2011, 14:38:40 EDT
- Comet impact theory disprovedMon, 26 Jan 2009, 17:43:11 EST
- New evidence implicates humans in prehistoric animal extinctionsMon, 11 Aug 2008, 17:35:48 EDT
- UMD-led EPOXI science team publishes latest comet findings in ScienceThu, 16 Jun 2011, 14:36:16 EDT
Other sources
- Study rebuts hypothesis that comet attacks ended 9,000-year-old Clovis culturefrom Science DailyThu, 31 Jan 2013, 10:30:48 EST
- Study: Comet didn't end ancient culturefrom UPIWed, 30 Jan 2013, 15:00:38 EST
- Clovis Culture Not Wiped Out By Cometfrom Scientific BloggingWed, 30 Jan 2013, 13:01:58 EST
- Prehistoric humans not wiped out by comet, says researchersfrom Science DailyWed, 30 Jan 2013, 11:01:17 EST
- Study rebuts hypothesis that comet attacks ended 9,000-year-old Clovis culturefrom PhysorgWed, 30 Jan 2013, 9:30:30 EST
- Prehistoric humans not wiped out by comet, say researchersfrom PhysorgWed, 30 Jan 2013, 9:30:26 EST
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