… an important, self-explanatory double volume issue. Certainly worth having a look at for all people interested in finding out more about an important, relatively late segment of a very long, global human dispersal story.
Jacques Cinq-Mars
Salemme, Monica C. and Laura L. Miotti (Eds.). 2003. SOUTH AMERICA: LONG AND WINDING ROADS FOR THE FIRST AMERICANS AT THE PLEISTOCENE/HOLOCENE TRANSITION. Quaternary International 109-110: 1-179 .
Copyright © 2003 Elsevier Ltd and the International Union for Quaternary Research (INQUA). All rights reserved
1.
South America: long and winding roads for the first Americans at the Pleistocene/Holocene transition, Pages 1-2
Laura L. Miotti and Mónica C. Salemme
2.
Localization and possible social aggregation in the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene on the north coast of Perú, Pages 3-11
Tom D. Dillehay, Jack Rossen, Greg Maggard, Kary Stackelbeck and Patricia Netherly
3.
Against ecological reductionism: Late Pleistocene hunter-gatherers in the tropical forests of northern South America, Pages 13-21
Cristóbal Gnecco
4.
Terminal Pleistocene/Early Holocene human adaptation in coastal Ecuador: the Las Vegas evidence, Pages 23-43
Karen E. Stothert, Dolores R. Piperno and Thomas C. Andres
5.
New radiocarbon chronology for the Guerrero Member of the Luján Formation (Buenos Aires, Argentina): palaeoclimatic significance, Pages 45-48
Eduardo P. Tonni, Roberto A. Huarte, Jorge E. Carbonari and Anibal J. Figini
6.
Long distance tool stone transport in the Argentine Pampas, Pages 49-64
Nora Flegenheimer, Cristina Bayón, Miguel Valente, Jorge Baeza and Jorge Femenías
7.
Archaeology of the Pleistocene–Holocene transition in Uruguay: an overview, Pages 65-76
Rafael Suárez and José M. López
8.
Early human occupations in Western Santa Cruz Province, Southernmost South America, Pages 77-86
Maria Teresa Civalero and Nora Viviana Franco
9.
Taphonomy of the Tres Arroyos 1 Rockshelter, Tierra del Fuego, Chile, Pages 87-93
Luis Alberto Borrero
10.
When Patagonia was colonized: people mobility at high latitudes during Pleistocene/Holocene transition, Pages 95-111
L. Miotti and M. C. Salemme
11.
Early human remains from Baño Nuevo-1 cave, central Patagonian Andes, Chile, Pages 113-121
Francisco Mena L, Omar Reyes B, Thomas W. Stafford, Jr. and John Southon
12.
Early peopling and evolutionary diversification in America, Pages 123-132
Héctor M. Pucciarelli, Marina L. Sardi, José C. Jimenez López and Carlos Serrano Sanchez
13.
Maybe we do know when people first came to North America; and what does it mean if we do?, Pages 133-145
Robert L. Kelly
14.
Patagonia: a paradox for building images of the first Americans during the Pleistocene/Holocene Transition, Pages 147-173
Laura L. Miotti
15.
Some difficulties in modeling the original peopling of the Americas, Pages 175-179
Alan L. Bryan and Ruth Gruhn
The abstracts and/or actual papers can be found
HERE.