Advertisements
Dubai |  
9 Mar 2010 - 19 Mar 2010
New Jersey, USA |  
26 Mar 2010 - 28 Mar 2010
Guangzhou | China |  
30 Mar 2010 - 1 Apr 2010
Singapore |  
9 Apr 2010 - 11 Apr 2010
Christmas Island |  
24 Apr 2010 - 1 May 2010
Long Beach, California, USA |  
15 May 2010 - 16 May 2010
Tacoma, Washington State, USA |  
21 May 2010 - 23 May 2010
Hong Kong |  
15 Jul 2010 - 18 Jul 2010
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia |  
30 Jul 2010 - 1 Aug 2010
Recommended reading
Andrea Ferrari and Antonella Ferrari
Creative Techniques and Camera Systems for Digital and Film
360 pages, 400 colour photos. Nautilus Publishing Sdn Bhd Distributed by NHBS Softcover | 2007 | £24.99 | approx. $50/€33 ISBN-13: 9789832731023

Oldest Skeleton in Americas Found in Underwater Cave

Deep inside an underwater cave in Mexico archaeologists have found a female skeleton been dated at 13,600 years old
Credit:  
Source:    National Geographic News  |  National Geographic News
   |   09-07-2008

If that age is accurate, the skeleton, Dubbed Eva de Naharon, or Eve of Naharon, —along with three others found in underwater caves along the Caribbean coast of the Yucatán Peninsula —would be the oldest human skeleton ever found in the Americas The three other skeletons excavated in the caves have been given a date range of 11,000 to 14,000 years ago, based on radiocarbon dating. The finds could provide new clues to how the Americas were first populated.

Clues from the skeletons' skulls hint that the people may not be of northern Asian descent, which would contradict the dominant theory of New World settlement. That theory holds that ancient humans first came to North America from northern Asia via a now submerged land bridge across the Bering Sea

"The shape of the skulls has led us to believe that Eva and the others have more of an affinity with people from South Asia than North Asia," González explained.

The remains have been excavated over the past four years near the town of Tulum, about 80 miles southwest of Cancún, by a team of scientists led by Arturo González, director of the Desert Museum in Saltillo, Mexico

"We don't now how these people whose remains were found in the caves arrived and whether they came from the Atlantic, the jungle, or inside the continent," González said.

Advertisement
Further reading â–ş

Spread the word...