Paleo-Indians - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Paleoindians or Paleoamericans are believed the first peoples to enter and inhabit the American continent during the final glacial episodes of the late Pleistocene. The prefix "paleo" comes from th...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleo-Indians
The earliest arrivals and their physical and cultural descendants, collectively called "Paleo-Indians" (meaning "ancient" Indians), appear to have occupied the Americas, including the southwestern United States and northern Mexico, for 10,000 to perhaps 40,000 years – a period of time longer than that for all the ...
www.desertusa.com/ind1/du_peo_paleo.html www.desertusa.com/ind1/du_peo_paleo.html
Recent articles seem to suggest that there could be a connection between Paleo-Indians and the Late Paleolithic of Europe. As yet, there is not a shred of archaeological evidence to establish any such connection, although the idea is not new.
www.comp-archaeology.org/USPaleo-Indian.htm www.comp-archaeology.org/USPaleo-Indian.htm
Paleo Indian refers to the small bands of nomadic people who first populated North America. ... Paleo Indian sites are often found on the outskirts of what used to be large bodies of water such as old glacial lakes and rivers. Perhaps they camped at the water's edge hoping to hunt the animals that went there to drink.
www.wvculture.org/shpo/paleo.html www.wvculture.org/shpo/paleo.html
Kennewick Man and other Paleo discussions from the Smithsonian's Arctic Studies Center ... "Virginia's Indians, Past & Present," Internet School Library Media Center...
www.nps.gov/seac/paleoind.htm www.nps.gov/seac/paleoind.htm
Paleo-Indians hunted in southeastern Arizona more than 10,000 years ago ... During the 100,000 years of the most recent Ice Age, while much of the Earth's water was locked up in the ice caps, the level of the oceans at times dropped by as much as 300 feet. At these times the Bering Strait became dry land, ... The Paleo-Indians;
www.discoverseaz.com/History/PaleoInd.html www.discoverseaz.com/History/PaleoInd.html
The Paleo-Indians remained in Utah until about 6,500 B.C., and their successors, the Great Basin and Plateau Archaic peoples, lived in Utah until about the time of Christ. Both groups inhabited caves and brush and wood shelters, subsisting either through nomadic or sedentary hunter-gatherer lifestyles.
historytogo.utah.gov/utah_chapters/american_indians/pal... historytogo.utah.gov/utah_chapters/american_indians/paleo-indians.html
Archeologists think that the Paleo Indians, sometimes referred to as the Clovis People, were among the first to inhabit the Americas. This ancient tribe appeared in our continent at the end of the last Ice Age, entering the continent from Asia.
www.indians.org/articles/paleo-indians.html www.indians.org/articles/paleo-indians.html
; Scrabble / Making Stone Points / Rabbit Hunt / Artists of the Lower Pecos; Baking Sotol & Lechugilla / Weaving Activity / Edible Plants / Archaic Tools / Atlatl...
www.nps.gov/amis/eatlatl.htm