SOFT NEWS Excavation of Asian tools in Alaska shows trade routes Centuries before European contact

Melodi

Disaster Cat
And just one day after I suggested something like this - we have this from The Western Digs Archeology site! I did wonder when this would show up because honestly it is so obviously likely - people had boats and they were going across all the time long before the Russians Settled Alaska; next likely is finds of trade goods further down the North and South American coasts - because ones in the Americas stuff would have continued to get traded onward with or without the help of Asian/Old World actual direct trading.


Asian Metal Found in Alaska Reveals Trade Centuries Before European Contact
Posted by Blake de Pastino on September 29, 2016 in Alaska, anthropology, archaeology, artifacts, Indians, Inuit, Native Americans, news | 669 Views | Leave a response

A bronze buckle and a cylindrical metal bead found in Alaska are the first hard evidence of trade between Asia and the indigenous peoples of the North American Arctic, centuries before contact with Europeans, archaeologists say.

An analysis of the artifacts has shown that they were smelted in East Asia out of lead, copper, and tin, before finding their way to an indigenous village some 700 years ago.

H. Kory Cooper, an anthropologist at Purdue University described the discovery as “a small finding with really interesting implications.”

“This will cause other people to think about the Arctic differently,” Cooper said in a press statement.

“Some have presented the Arctic and Subarctic regions as backwater areas with no technological innovation, because there was a very small population at the time.

“That doesn’t mean interesting things weren’t happening, and this shows that locals were not only using locally available metals but were also obtaining metals from elsewhere.”
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alaska-bronze-asian-artifacts
Among the artifacts are a fishing lure with eyes made of iron (top), a copper fish hook (bottom right), a belt buckle (bottom, second from right) and a needle (bottom). (Photo courtesy Cooper et al., JAS. May not be used without permission.)

The artifacts were originally reported in 2011, after they had been unearthed from the site of a house in northwestern Alaska that dated between 700 and 900 years old.

The dwelling was part of a cluster of sites inhabited by the Thule, ancestors of the modern Inuit, on Cape Espenberg on the Seward Peninsula.

The metal objects found there were clearly not locally made, Cooper said, and yet the site was inhabited centuries before sustained contact with Europeans began in the late 1700s.
[Learn about life at a site long before European contact: “‘Twin’ Ice Age Infants Discovered in 11,500-Year-Old Alaska Grave“]

Indigenous peoples of the Arctic did use naturally available metals, such as raw copper, native iron, and even meteorites, Cooper explained, but they did not smelt their own metals.

Analysis of the buckle and the bead conducted at Cooper’s lab using X-ray fluorescence showed that both were made from a heavily leaded alloy like that smelted in Asia at the time.

“We believe these smelted alloys were made somewhere in Eurasia and traded to Siberia and then traded across the Bering Strait to ancestral Inuits people,” Cooper said.

While the metals themselves can’t be dated, the buckle was attached to a leather strap that yielded a radiocarbon date of 500 to 800 years — within the same age range as the house where they were found, although researchers point out that the bronze pieces may well be older than the house.
[See the latest discoveries made in the region: “Ice Age Fire Pits in Alaska Reveal Earliest Evidence of Salmon Cooking“]

“The belt buckle also is considered an industrial product and is an unprecedented find for this time,” Cooper said.

“It resembles a buckle used as part of a horse harness that would have been used in north-central China during the first six centuries before the Common Era.”
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The two bronze artifacts were found at the site of a house dated to between 1100 and 1300 CE. (Photo courtesy University of Colorado. May not be used without permission.)

The confirmation of Asian metals being traded in pre-contact Alaska is not entirely unexpected, Cooper noted.

“This is not a surprise based on oral history and other archaeological finds, and it was just a matter of time before we had a good example of Eurasian metal that had been traded,” he said.

In fact, the same team that uncovered the buckle and bead on Cape Espenberg had found three other artifacts made from copper at another nearby site.

The finds there included a fish hook, a needle, and a small piece of copper sheeting.
[See metal artifacts left behind by castaways: “200-Year-Old Shipwreck Survivors’ Camp Found on Alaska Island“]

These pieces were found at the site of much more recent dwelling dated to the 17th century, which is believed to have been part of an indigenous trade network of native copper.

The discovery of metal artifacts of any kind is rare, Cooper noted, because such tools were often used until they were worn down and did not preserve well.

“These items are remarkable due to curation and preservation issues,” Cooper said.

Cooper and his colleagues report their findings in the October issue of the Journal of Archaeological Science.

ResearchBlogging.orgCooper, H., Mason, O., Mair, V., Hoffecker, J., & Speakman, R. (2016). Evidence of Eurasian metal alloys on the Alaskan coast in prehistory Journal of Archaeological Science, 74, 176-183 DOI: 10.1016/j.jas.2016.04.021
http://westerndigs.org/asian-metal-found-in-alaska-reveals-trade-centuries-before-european-contact/
 

FaithfulSkeptic

Carrying the mantle of doubt
If they knew how to deal with the cold, the cross at the Bering Strait is far easier than crossing the Atlantic. Two 20 mile hops and you're there.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
If they knew how to deal with the cold, the cross at the Bering Strait is far easier than crossing the Atlantic. Two 20 mile hops and you're there.
Exactly the point I made yesterday but without as much detail...

Decades ago, in one of my first official classes called "The Archaeology of the Americas" the first page flat out state that people could only have come over the Bering Strait either 40,000 years ago or 12,000 years ago when their were land bridges.

And since science "knew" they didn't come 40,000 years ago; they MUST have come over 12,000 years ago...

I'm afraid my future career was pretty much doomed from the start when I raised my hands and said;

"Why? People cross back and forth all the time now on boats, couldn't they have done that in pre-history?"....

It should be noted I never finished my graduate studies....I suspect even if I had, I wouldn't have worked very long in the field....

As I mentioned on facebook about this article; the find itself was in 2011, I note nothing was said about it in public until the same time period as the Roman coins in Japan. Now it may be "OK" to talk about this "new" find...

I suspect a lot more stuff will suddenly start showing up along the American Coasts (all the way down the Western sides at least) because a deep problem with the entrenched theories in archaeology is that people don't tend to find things they are not looking for.

I point out as evidence (as I predicted a decade or so ago on this forum) that is now suddenly being found for "Neanderthal carvings, cave paintings and even musical instruments" a lot of that stuff had been found years ago but because "we knew" Neanderthals couldn't "do that" they were just "deemed" to be the work of "modern man."

Now that they are known to be part of our own ancestry (at least Europeans and Asians) suddenly it is all changed!

The same is likely to happen in Western Archaeology, including I'm betting on admitting to the Maize Corn in South India if the evidence is a good as it seems to be (again trade routes)...
 

night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea
Melodi, you're a sacreligious apostate heathen who should be drummed out of archaeology, you should be stripped of your big sun hat, your trowel and brushes broken over someone's knee and thrown to the wayside with your sifting screens, your screeds and your worthless writings!!!

Belief in what you have written here causes knickers to be buttoned above the knee, marijuana to run rampart, and dry rot in the roof beams!!

You will NEVER be welcome back here in River City.





(Let's see.."Branded"...Check
"Music Man" ....check
"Reefer Madness"...check
"Mercy Thompson"/Pat Briggs..check
only 4 refs. Have to work on that)
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Melodi, you're a sacreligious apostate heathen who should be drummed out of archaeology, you should be stripped of your big sun hat, your trowel and brushes broken over someone's knee and thrown to the wayside with your sifting screens, your screeds and your worthless writings!!!

Belief in what you have written here causes knickers to be buttoned above the knee, marijuana to run rampart, and dry rot in the roof beams!!

You will NEVER be welcome back here in River City.





(Let's see.."Branded"...Check
"Music Man" ....check
"Reefer Madness"...check
"Mercy Thompson"/Pat Briggs..check
only 4 refs. Have to work on that)
Or as my major professor said "never give up; write books and articles, keep involved in re-enactment, practice traditional crafts, practice modern shamanism, teach informally and just use to day job to help support yourself."

Followed by the even wiser advice "I was fortunate to be born independently wealthy, I know of know other way to make an real living in this field."

Especially he went on, if your a bit of a gadfly like he was and I certainly am lol

Besides, I never really enjoyed muddy excavations anyway; I'm one of those who vastly prefer researching what other people did up and exploring what that might mean for both the past and the present.

Which reminds me I need to find that article on the Norse uses for cannabis; especially in regards to the textiles in the Oseberg Ship burial ...lol

snip...
M. Michael Brady
Asker, Norway

In 2007, some cannabis seeds were found in a small leather purse among the grave goods of two women buried for more than 11 centuries on a Viking ship. The ship was discovered in 1903 in a mound at the Oseberg Farm near Tønsberg on the west bank of the Oslofjord. The find raised new questions in the research on Viking uses of psychoactive agents as well as on the significance of the burial of the women.
snip...
http://www.norwegianamerican.com/heritage/viking-ship-cannabis-conundrum/
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Your welcome Limner, I think some of the Native sites would find it interesting too; I realized when my husband came up with the information on the Maize corn possibly being in South India (he was doing research on herbs and plants) that huge amounts of energy have been focus on contact between Europe and North/South America pre 1492; but very little has been focused on Asian contacts and almost nothing at all on the possible trade routes along the Barring Straight.

There have been a few popular books that mention the Chinese expedition that probably reached the US West Coast but there isn't a lot of detail and that is pretty much it; I know there has been some work done recently on the potential of the "sea route" for some of the very early (pre-Clovis, now proven) sites on the West Coast of the Americas (almost down to the South Pole) but this is the first time I've seen the most obvious of trade routes verified (of course this is much later; like around the time the Norse may have been visiting the East Coast of the Americas).
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
I find the story very interesting and very believable.

I have a copy of the book by Gavin Menzies, 1421, The Year China Discovered The World.

Gavin does rise some interesting questions

NW
 

Publius

TB Fanatic
There is some talk and ancient documentation of the Chinese having set sail and thought to have discovered/found the west coast now known as California long long ago. Said to have done a number of these trips, so this is very likely that Chinese ships landed and became on the spot traders with the people they found living there.
 

Freeholder

This too shall pass.
I used to have an ancient Chinese coin that my mother found on a central Oregon beach when she was a girl. Who knows how it got there....

I was doing some research a few years ago, and came across an early photograph of some Aleut men. They wore fur clothing, but aside from that looked exactly like pictures of Mandarin Chinese from a few hundred years ago in their silk robes -- the Aleut men wore long fur robes (with nothing under them, supposedly -- that surprised me, because of the high winds and cold in the Aleutian Islands). There had to have been major contact for a cultural thing like the long robes to have transmitted to a climate where they really weren't suitable. (My guess is the Aleuts were exiled Chinese, but I don't know what DNA testing and language studies have shown.)

Kathleen
 
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