Calico Early Man Site

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Calico Early Man Site
Calico Early Man Site

Calico Early Man site is a possible archaeological site 15 miles NE of Barstow, California, in the Calico Hills of the Mojave Desert, officially known as Calico Early Man Archaeological Site. Thousands of stones that bear a strong resemblance to prehistoric tools have been found at the site. Scientifically dated to over 200,000 BP (years before present), these stones are older than the traditional date of man's first entry into the Americas, approximately 11,000 BP. The debate centers on whether the "tools" were made by humans (i.e., artifacts), or through typical geological processes (i.e. geofacts). The general scientific consensus is that the stones are geofacts.


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[edit] Artifacts or Geofacts?

Up to 60,000 possible stone tools have been found at Calico. Due to their shape and size, it has been hypothesized by several archaeologists that these objects are artifacts, that is, that they were shaped by human actions. If confirmed, dates for these objects would indicate human presence at Calico far earlier than any other site in the Americas, 50,000 to 200,000 years BP. These dates are based on the age of the sediments containing the stones, which were most recently dated by thermoluminescence at 135,000 years BP,[1] and by uranium/thorium analysis at 200,000 years BP.[2]

However, in 1979, James G. Duvall and William Thomas Venner published a statistical analysis of the stone objects, stating that they were "not modified by man but, rather, were form selected by the archaeologists. Form selection . . . is the selection of naturally fractured lithics that resemble man-made tools and therefore create a biased sample of lithics from the total population of naturally fractured lithics at that site".[3]

This was followed in 1982 by Louis Payen's analysis of the stone objects against the Barnes platform angle method.[4] The Barnes test had been developed to test Paleolithic tools, examining the angle of facture to distinguish a human-chipped stone artifact against those made by nature. Payen concluded that the stone objects were geofacts.

Both the Duvall/Venner and the Payen papers have been criticized on a number of levels, and analyses supporting the pro-artifact argument have been published.[5] However, the present consensus, by no means unanimous, is that there is no evidence of human activity at the Calico Early Man site. This consensus developed based on a number of factors, including:

  • The lack of other evidence of human activity (e.g. human or animal remains, or non-tool artifacts).
  • The deep antiquity of the site (the next oldest date for human artifacts in the Americas is 30,000 BP, and that date itself is controversial).
  • The sheer number of possible tools, up to 60,000 by one account.[6]
  • The research by Duvall/Venner, Payen, and others providing possible natural explanations for the stone objects.

Renewed interest in the site has been sparked by research at the Topper Site, Meadowcroft Rockshelter, and other pre-clovis archeological sites.


[edit] History of Excavations

In 1959 Louis Leakey, while at the British Museum of Natural History in London, received a visit from Ruth DeEtte Simpson, an archaeologist from California. Simpson had acquired what looked like ancient scrapers from a site in the Calico Hills and showed it to Leakey.

Leakey viewed it as important to study the Calico Hill site,[7], as he was convinced that the number and distribution of native languages in the Americas required more time than 12,000 years to evolve and acquire their current distribution.[8] The opportunity to test this theory came four years later in 1963, when Leakey obtained funds from the National Geographic Society and commenced archaeological excavations with Simpson.

This time Mary Leakey did not share his visionary views. She regarded Louis as often slipping into incompetence and often publicised that opinion.[7] Louis Leakey continued to visit the site several times a year and was connected with the project until his death in 1972. The site was taken over by California's Bureau of Land Management and was opened to the public. It presently offers a visitor center, gift shop, and guided walking tour.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Debenham.
  2. ^ Bischoff.
  3. ^ Duvall and Venner.
  4. ^ Payen
  5. ^ Patterson, et al.
  6. ^ AmericanWest's Calico Site Update
  7. ^ a b Morell, pp. 266-267.
  8. ^ Calico Site Update.

[edit] References

  • Bischoff, J.L., R.J. Shlemon, T.L. Ku, R.D. Simpson, R.J. Rosenbauer, & F.E. Budinger, Jr., "1981 Uranium-series and Soils-geomorphic Dating of the Calico Archaeological Site, California", Geology V9 (12), pp. 576-582.
  • Budinger Jr., Fred E., Oberlander, Theodore Calicodig.com "This web site describes and analyzes the Calico Archaeological Site and the Calico Lithic Industry". With many stone object photos.
  • Debenham, N., (1998) Thermoluminescence Dating of Sediment from the Calico Site (California) (CAL1), Quaternary TL Surveys, Nottingham, United Kingdom, 1998.
  • Duvall, James G., and Venner, William Thomas, “A Statistical Analysis of the Lithics from the Calico Site (SBCM 1500A), California”, Journal of Field Archaeology, Winter 1979: Vol. 6, No. 4, pp. 455-462.
  • Morell, Virginia (1995) Ancestral Passions: The Leakey Family and the Quest for Humankind's Beginnings, Simon & Schuster, pp. 266-267.
  • Payen, L., “Artifacts or geofacts at Calico: Application of the Barnes test,” in Peopling of the New World, Ericson J., Taylor, R., and Berger, R., eds. Los Altos, California: Ballena Press, 1982, pp. 193–201.
  • Patterson, Leland W.; Hoffman, Louis V.; Higginbotham, Rose Marie; Simpson, Ruth D. (1987) "Analysis of Lithic Flakes at the Calico Site, California", in Journal of Field Archaeology, Vol. 14, No. 1 (Spring, 1987), pp. 91-106.
  • AmericanWest's North American Archaeology Section, Calico Site Update. ". . .over 60,000 tools and flakes have been collected".


[edit] External links

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