Dry Creek Revisited: New Excavations, Radiocarbon Dates, and Site Formation Inform on the Peopling of Eastern Beringia

The multicomponent Dry Creek site, located in the Nenana Valley, central Alaska, is arguably one of the most important archaeological sites in Beringia. Original work in the 1970s identified two separate cultural layers, called Components 1 and 2, thought to date to the terminal Pleistocene and sugg...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAmerican antiquity Vol. 80; no. 4; p. 671
Main Authors Graf, Kelly E, DiPietro, Lyndsay M, Krasinski, Kathryn E, Gore, Angela K, Smith, Heather L, Culleton, Brendan J, Kennett, Douglas J, Rhode, David
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Washington Cambridge University Press 01.10.2015
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Summary:The multicomponent Dry Creek site, located in the Nenana Valley, central Alaska, is arguably one of the most important archaeological sites in Beringia. Original work in the 1970s identified two separate cultural layers, called Components 1 and 2, thought to date to the terminal Pleistocene and suggesting that the site was visited by Upper Paleolithic hunter-gatherers between about 13,000 and 12,000 calendar years before present (cal B.P.). The oldest of these became the type-assemblage for the Nenana complex. Recently, some have questioned the geoarchaeological integrity of the site's early deposits, suggesting that the separated cultural layers resulted from natural postdepositional disturbances. In 2011, we revisited Dry Creek to independently assess the site's age and formation. Here we present our findings and reaffirm original interpretations of clear separation of two terminal Pleistocene cultural occupations. For the first time, we report direct radiocarbon dates on cultural features associated with both occupation zones, one dating to 13,485-13,305 and the other to 11,060-10,590 cal B.P.
ISSN:0002-7316
2325-5064
DOI:10.7183/0002-7316.80.4.671