Out of Asia: peopling the Americas and the Pacific
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Canberra, ACT : Division of Pacific and Asian History, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, The Australian National University.
Abstract
In the present volume Stephen Zegura paints the backdrop for discussion
of the peopling of the Americas. He reviews the archaeological record and
summarizes the palaeoclimatic data needed for deciding which were the most
plausible routes which could have been followed by the first migrants to
North America. He draws attention also to the long-standing dispute on the
distinctiveness or otherwise of the American Indians and the Aleut-Eskimos,
and concludes by presenting a speculative scenario for the origins of the
diverse human groups among the aboriginal inhabitants of the Americas.
Christy Turner lends support to Zegura's description, drawing on his own
extensive studies of the structure of teeth recovered from crania of the
Americas and from many parts of north and east Asia. The distinctive
structure of the teeth of all native Americans places their biological relationship
firmly in an east Asian setting.
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The Journal of Pacific History (JPH)
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Open Access
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