Jun 8, 2009 06:00 PM in Evolution | 15 comments
Did Paleo-Indians hunt on lands now submerged by the modern Great Lakes?
What is now part of Lake Huron's obscured floor became a dry land bridge between modern-day Presque Isle, Mich., and Point Clark, Ontario when lake levels dipped some 7,500 to 10,000 years ago. But could it have been a rich hunting ground for Paleo-Indians?
Previous wisdom has held that "most [sites] are presumed lost forever beneath the lakes"—which were carved out and filled in by receding glaciers about 10,000 years ago—note the authors of a new study, published today in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, which has found traces of what appear to be stone structures, hunting blinds, dwelling sites and caribou drive lanes hidden under the mussels and algae at the bottom of the lake.
Using sonar and remote-operated vehicles, the research team from the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor's Museum of Anthropology and Marine Hydrodynamics Laboratory surveyed about 28 square miles (72 square kilometers) as deep as 492 feet (150 meters) below the lake's surface along the now-submerged Alpena-Amberley ridge. Among the findings was a 984-foot- (300-meter-) long structure that match caribou driving lanes (a long precursor to the modern cattle chute, which directed herds of caribou into an area where they could be killed) documented on dry land on Canada's Victoria Island.
The findings "raise the possibility that intact settlements and ancient landscapes are preserved beneath Lake Huron," the study authors write. They hope to soon send in autonomous underwater vehicles and scuba-diving archeologists to search for smaller, more detailed artifacts.
Image of a possible hunting blind made from three boulders below Lake Huron courtesy of John O'Shea/University of Michigan
You Might Also Like
Discuss This Article
Subscription Center
World Changing Ideas
-
Video ContestInnovation is the key to a better future. Enter your own World Changing Ideas videos in our contest.
Most Popular Blog Posts
9,000-year-old brew hitting the shelves this summer
Manipulative meow: Cats learn to vocalize a particular sound to train their human companions
Wylie Coywolf: The coyote-wolf hybrid has made its way to the Northeast
A lizard that swims through sand
Scientists urge EPA to assess potential phthalates risks
Editor's Pick
-
Time to Ban Production of Nuclear Weapons MaterialA new global treaty that cuts off production of plutonium and highly enriched uranium for nuclear weapons could jump-start nuclear disarmament and help prevent proliferation
Evolution Newsletter
Get weekly coverage delivered to your inboxVideo
Podcasts
-
60-Second Science
RSS ·
iTunes
Botoxed Face Impairs Bad Feelings
click to enable
-
60-Second Science
RSS ·
iTunes
Distracted Customers' Wait Times Fly
click to enable
Slideshows
Prehistoric patterns: A dinosaur gets color from head to feathery tail
Are Coyotes or Humans the Perpetrators of Suburban Animal Attacks?
How Toads Conquered the World [Slide Show]



