
ANCIENT MEALAn excavated Monte Verde structure, possibly once used as a medical hut, contains several chewed pieces of seaweed.
T. Dillehay
Southern Chile lies near the bottom of the world, but it
sits atop scientific efforts to unravel how and when the Americas were
first settled. New evidence unearthed at Chile’s Monte Verde site supports the
idea that prehistoric people moved slowly down the Pacific Coast — beginning
well before 14,000 years ago — and established many inland outposts along the
way.
A team led by archaeologist Tom Dillehay of Vanderbilt
University in Nashville unearthed ample remains of nine seaweed species —
including five species not found before at Monte Verde — from hearths and other
parts of two hutlike structures. Radiocarbon measurements of seaweed remnants
yielded an age estimate ranging from 14,220 to 13,980 years ago.
That finding buttresses Dillehay’s controversial 1997 report,
based on radiocarbon dating of bones and charcoal, that people inhabited Monte
Verde by 14,000 years ago. The southern Chilean site, located 30 kilometers
from the coast, was occupied more than 1,000 years earlier than any other
reliably dated settlement in the Americas, the researchers conclude in the May
9 Science.
“Finding seaweed wasn’t a surprise, but finding five new
species in the abundance that we found them was a surprise,” Dillehay says.
“The Monte Verdeans were really like beachcombers and apparently had a
tradition of exploiting coastal resources.”

BEACHCOMBERSAncient residents of Monte Verde may have trekked west to Pacific Coast beaches such as this one in order to gather seaweed and other coastal resources.Mario Pino
Whereas some types of seaweed at Monte Verde came from the
coast, others derived from an inland bay situated six kilometers south of the
settlement.
The seaweed species recovered at Monte Verde all represent
good sources of iodine, iron, zinc and other nutrients. These seaweeds also
promote cholesterol metabolism, bone strength and the body’s ability to fight
infection. Local populations still use certain seaweed species found at Monte
Verde to treat common health problems.
Dillehay’s team also recovered three stone tools, one of
which contains microscopic seaweed fragments on its edge. Ancient residents
used this implement to cut and prepare seaweed, the researchers suggest.
Because Monte Verde also contains remains of nearby animals,
vegetables and nuts, Dillehay suspects that ancient people moved back and forth
from the coast to the inland site.
If other early New World migrants traveled down the Pacific Coast
from Alaska to South
America, they may have stopped along the way to reap the bounties
of hundreds of inland river basins, Dillehay proposes. That process began more
than 16,000 years ago, in his view. “The peopling of the Americas may
not have been the blitzkrieg movement to the south that researchers have
assumed, but a much slower and more deliberate process,” he says.
Jon Erlandson of the University
of Oregon in Eugene agrees. He hypothesizes that people
could have moved slowly down the Pacific
Coast, exploiting a range
of resources from kelp forests just off the coast. “The new Monte Verde
research provides a nice seaweed garnish for this coastal migration theory,” he
says.
Dillehay’s results challenge the longstanding view that New
World colonization began no more than 13,000 years ago and reached South
America perhaps a millennium later as groups of big game hunters followed herds
south.
The new study verifies that people lived at Monte Verde
14,000 years ago, remarks archaeologist Daniel Sandweiss of the University of Maine in Orono. Until now, Sandweiss had
been skeptical of that claim.
“The model of slow migration with inland forays is
intriguing and quite possibly right,” Sandweiss says. To test that hypothesis,
scientists need to find evidence of other ancient inland sites that contain
coastal resources, in his view. Sea-level rises have probably submerged most
coastal settlements from Monte Verde’s time.
Found in: Humans