Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-wxhwt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-09T15:14:25.607Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Gordon Creek Woman Meets Kennewick Man: New Interpretations and Protocols Regarding the Peopling of the Americas

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Alan Swedlund
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of Massachusetts-Amherst, Amherst, MA 01003-4805
Duane Anderson
Affiliation:
School of American Research, PO Box 2188, Santa Fe, NM 87504

Abstract

Recent discoveries—particularly those of Kennewick Man—have renewed debates on the peopling of the Americas. Our vantage point comes from research on the Gordon Creek Burial which commenced some 30 years ago. We suggest that a contrast between the conditions under which Gordon Creek and Kennewick were recovered and analyzed provides insights into current interpretations and controversies. Specifically, we argue that bioarchaeologists cannot, and therefore should not, separate the sociopolítical issues from the scientific, that biological assignments of affiliation are extremely problematic in such cases, and that prior assumptions figure strongly in the interpretations presented. If more detailed understanding of the peopling of the Americas is a common goal, then we as bioarchaeologists must be prepared to reexamine our practices and learn from our mistakes.

Résumé

Résumé

Descubrimientos recientes, especialmente los relacionados con el Hombre de Kennewick, han renovado debates sobre elpoblamiento de las Américas. Nuestra perspectiva parte de investigaciones empezadas hace unos treinta años sobre el Entierro de Gordon Creek. Proponemos que existe un contraste entre las condiciones en que se recobraron y se analizaron Gordon Creek y Kennewick y que este contraste aporta nuevas perspectivas para las interpretaciones y controversias actuales. Concretamente, proponemos que los bioarqueólogos no deben ni pueden separar los aspectos sociopolíticos de lo científico, que la asignación de afiliación biológica es extremamente problemática en estos casos, y que las suposiciones tienen un papel muy importante en las interpretaciones ofrecidas hasta hoy. Si nuestro objetivo es elde llegar a tener un conocimiento más detallado del poblamiento de las Américas, los bioarqueólogos tenemos que estarpreparado para examinar de nuevo nuestras prácticas y aprender de nuestros errores.

Type
Forum
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 1999

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References Cited

Anderson, D. 1967 The Gordon Creek Burial. Wyoming Archaeologist 10: 2736.Google Scholar
Anderson, D. 1998 The NAGPRA Experiment. Anthropology Newsletter 39(4): 2728.Google Scholar
Anderson, D., Swedlund, A. C., and Breternitz, D.A. 1997 Let's Avoid Paleo-Racial Anthropology. Anthropology Newsletter 38(9): 13.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beck, L.A. 1995 Regional Approaches to Mortuary Analysis. Plenum Press, New York.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Breternitz, D.A., Swedlund, A.C., and Anderson, D. 1971 An Early Burial from Gordon Creek, Colorado. American Antiquity 36: 170182.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, J.A. (editor) 1971 Approaches to the Social Dimension of Mortuary Practices. Memoir No. 25. Society for American Archaeology, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Buikstra, J.E., and Ubelaker, D.H. (editors) 1994 Standards for Data Collection from Human Skeletal Remains. Research Series No. 44. Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville.Google Scholar
Cassells, E. S. 1983 The Archaeology of Colorado. Johnson Books, Boulder, Colorado.Google Scholar
Chatters, J.C. 1997 Encounter with an Ancestor. Anthropology Newsletter 38(1): 910.Google Scholar
Chatters, J.C. 1998 Human Biological History, Not Race. Anthropology Newsletter 39﹛2): 19,20. Google Scholar
Chatters, J.C. 1999 Preliminary Analysis of “Kennewick Man,” A Paleoamerican Skeleton from the Northwestern United States. Published Abstract. American Journal of Physical Anthropology Supplement 28: 105.Google Scholar
Demos, J. 1995 The Unredeemed Captive: A Family Story from Early America. Vintage/Random House, New York.Google Scholar
Goldstein, L.G. 1980 Mississippian Mortuary Practices: A Case Study of Two Cemeteries in the Lower Illinois Valley. Scientific Papers 4. Center for American Archeology, Kampsville, Illinois.Google Scholar
Goldstein, L.G. 1992 The Potential for Future Relationships between Archaeologists and Native Americans. In Quandaries and Quests: Visions of Archaeology's Future, edited by Wandsnider, L., pp 5971. Occasional Paper 20. Center for Archaeological Investigations and Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale.Google Scholar
Goodman, A. 1997 Racializing Kennewick Man. Anthropology Newsletter 38(10): 3.Google Scholar
Goodman, A. 1998 The Race Pit. Anthropology Newsletter 39(5): 52,50.Google Scholar
Green, T.J., Chochran, B., Fenton, T.W., Woods, J.C., Titmus, G. L., Tieszen, L., Davis, M.A., and Miller, S. J. 1998 The Buhl Burial: A Paleoindian Woman from Southern Idaho. American Antiquity 63: 437456.Google Scholar
Hooton, E.A. 1931 Up from the Ape. Macmillan, New York.Google Scholar
Leone, M., and Preucel, R. 1992 Archaeology in a Demographic Society. In Quandaries and Quests: Visions of Archaeology's Future, edited by Wandsnider, L., pp. 115135. Occasional Paper 20. Center for Archaeological Investigations and Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale.Google Scholar
Marks, J. 1998 Replaying the Race Card. Anthropology Newsletter 39(5): 1,4-5.Google Scholar
Martin, D. 1998 Owning the Sins of the Past. In Toward a New Biocultural Synthesis: Critical and Political Economic Perspectives in Biological Anthropology, edited by Goodman, A. and Leatherman, T.. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
McManamon, F.P. 1999 K-Man Undergoes Complete Physical. Anthropology Newsletter 40(5): 2122.Google Scholar
Morell, V. 1998a Kennewick Man: More Bones to Pick. Science 279: 2526.Google Scholar
Morell, V. 1998b Kennewick Man's Contemporaries. Science 280: 191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morell, V. 1999 The First Americans. 26 April: 5057.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Palkovich, A.M. 1980 The Arroyo Hondo Skeletal and Mortuary Remains. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Palkovich, A.M. 1999 New Craniofacial and Dental Perspectives on Native American Origins. Published Abstract. American Journal of Physical Anthropology Supplement 28: 224225.Google Scholar
Powell, J. R, and Steele, D. G. 1994 Diet and Health of Paleoindians: An Examination of Early Holocene Human Dental Remains. In Paleonutrition; The Diet and Health of Prehistoric Americans, edited by Sobolik, K., pp. 178194. Center for Archaeological Investigations and Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale.Google Scholar
Preston, D. 1997 The Lost Man. New Yorker 16 June: 7081.Google Scholar
Relethford, J. H. 1994 Craniometric Variation among Modern Human Populations. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 95: 5362.Google Scholar
Relethford, J. H. 1997 Kennewick Man. Lilly Fund Television Broadcast. PBS. November.Google Scholar
Rowlandson, M. 1913 A Narrative of the Captivity of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson. In Narratives of the Indian Wars (1675-1699), edited by Lincoln, C. H., pp. 118136. Scribners and Sons, New York. Google Scholar
Schneider, A. 1997 Court Rules on Kennewick Man Case. Anthropology Newsletter 38(9): 37.Google Scholar
Schneider, A. 1998a Kennewick Man Update. Anthropology Newsletter 39(6): 2223.Google Scholar
Schneider, A. 1998b Anthropologists Go to the Hill for Kennewick Man. Anthropology Newsletter 39(6): 2324.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Slayman, A. L. 1997 A Battle over Bones: Lawyers Contest the Fate of and 8400-Year-Old Skeleton from Washington State. Archaeology 5Q(\): \6. Google Scholar
Steele, D. G., and Powell, J.F. 1993 Paleobiology of the First Americans. Evolutionary Anthropology 2(4): 138146.Google Scholar
Steele, D. G., and Powell, J.F. 1994 Paleobiological Evidence of the Peopling of the Americas: A Morphometric View. In Method and Theory for Investigating the Peopling of the Americas, edited by Bonnichsen, R. and Steele, D.G. pp. 141163. Center for the Study of the First Americans, Oregon State University.Google Scholar
Turner, C.G. II 1992 New World Origins: New Research from the Americas and Soviet Union. In Ice Age Hunters of the Rockies, edited by D.J. Stanford and J.S. Day, pp. 750. Denver Museum of Natural Sciences and University of Colorado Press, Niwot, Colorado.Google Scholar
Turner, C.G. II 1997 Letter to David A. Breternitz, September 16, 1997.Google Scholar
Vaughan, A.T., and Richter, D. K. 1980 Crossing the Cultural Divide: Indians and New Engenders 1605-1763. Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 90.Google Scholar