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Folsom Site

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Comments

Type locality for folsom blades - dated to the period between 9500 BCE and 8000 BCE.  The Folsom site has become famous for showing that Native Americans settled North America long ago - in contrast to claims made in the 18 and 19th centuries that Indians were new immigrants.  A Folsom blade was found in an extinct bison that went extinct thousands of years ago. 

Description


Folsom Site

Folsom Site or Wild Horse Arroyo (29CX1), about 8 miles west of Folsom, New Mexico, is the archaeological site that is the type site for the Folsom tradition, a Paleo-Indian cultural sequence dating to between 9000 BC and 8000 BC. The Folsom Site was excavated in 1926 and found to have been a marsh-side kill site or camp where 23 bison had been killed using distinctive tools, known as Folsom points. This site is significant because it was the first time that artifacts indisputably made by humans were found directly associated with faunal remains from an extinct form of bison from the Late Pleistocene. The information culled from this site was the first of a set of discoveries that would allow archaeologists to revise their estimations for the time of arrival of Native Americans on the North American continent.

References

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