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The Kennewick skeleton; chronological and biomolecular contexts.

R E Taylor, David Glenn Smith, John R Southon

Abstract


A human skeleton recovered near Kennewick, Washington, USA in 1996 has been dated to the early Holocene on the basis of multiple radiocarbon determinations, an analysis of a style of a temporally diagnostic projectile point found embedded in the ilium of the skeleton, and geological investigations of the locality where the skeleton was recovered. Based on morphological criteria, the Kennewick skeleton, which is one of the most complete early Holocene human skeletons recovered so far in the Western Hemisphere, appears to be more similar to those of modern South Asians and Europeans than to modern Native Americans or to contemporary indigenous populations of Northeast Asia.

Keywords


Washington;fossil man;lower Holocene;skeletons;Benton County Washington;Kennewick Man;Kennewick Washington;Hominidae;Homo;Primates;amino acids;artifacts;biogeography;anthropology;Theria;Eutheria;accuracy;organic acids;Mammalia;archaeology;Holocene;chronology;Chordata;Tetrapoda;Vertebrata;biochemistry;organic compounds;United States;bones;Cenozoic;Quaternary;C 14;carbon;dates;isotopes;radioactive isotopes;absolute age

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