

Aleuts: Survivors of the Bering Land Bridge. Perspectives From The Old World On The Habitation Of The New. New Dates from Old Bones: Twisted Fractures in Mammoth Bones and Some Flaked Bone Tools Suggest that Humans Occupied the Yukon More than 40,000 Years Ago. Early Man in South America, Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 52. “The Origin and Antiquity of the American Indian.” Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institution for 1923, 481-94. Remains in Eastern Asia of the Race that Peopled America. Bones Say Man Lived in Yukon 27,000 years Ago. Frequency of a 9-bp Deletion in the Mitochondrial DNA among Asian Populations. Harihara, Shinji, Momoki Hirai, Yumiko Suutou, Koji Shimizu, and Keiichi Omoto 1992.

Bartolomé de las Casas: An Interpretation of His Life and Writings. The Trimmed-Core Tradition in Asiatic-American Contacts in Early Native Americans, editor D. “A Late Ice-Age Settlement in Southern Chile.” Scientific American 251(4):106-117.ĭragoo, D.W. New York: Academic Press.ĭillehay, Tom D. –.1984 Faunal Remains at Klasies River Mouth. The First Americans: Search and Research.

Wherever available, a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) or a ISBN link will take you to the journal website where the abstract (and sometimes the whole paper) will be available for free.īinford, Lewis R. I will be working on organizing and growing Hicks’s bibliographic database as time allows to match and complement Hawks’s bibliographic database. John Hawks has a rather comprehensive, 11,500-entry-strong bibliography originating with Milford Wolpoff on his website. I personally have never tracked publications on human origins and American Indian origins to the same systematic extent as I have been compiling an interdisciplinary bibliography of kinship studies. Back in the 1990s Hicks was a human origins blogger before blogging became easy and mainstream: he annotated, summarized and commented on various papers, which he obtained at the UC Santa Barbara library, and then circulated them electronically via the Mother Tongue mailing list. This is work-in-progress and includes, as a start, the bibliographic references assembled over the years and oftentimes annotated/summarized by Alvah (Pardner) Hicks.
