Old Crow River is a river located in the the Bering Sea Watershed of the Yukon. The river is a tributary of Porcupine River.
Richard E. Morlan of the Canadian National Museum of Man and Archeological Survey of Canada conducted a study of modified bones found on Old Crow River sites in the 1970s. Morlan stated that the bones found exhibited signs of intentional human work before the bones were fossilized. This would suggest humans were in Canada during the late Pleistocene. This would place humans in the Americas earlier than thought by scientists. [1]
Later R.M. Thorson and R.D. Guthrie tried to refute Morlan's research in a study they conducted. Thorson and Guthrie claimed that river action could cause the markings on the bones that Morlan attributed to humans. [2] Morlan believed Thorson's experiments have not shown that all the altered fossils from Old Crow Basin can attributed to river icing and breakup.[3]