12 February 2011
Ancient nomadic camps discovered in Mexico
Eight archaeological sites, some of them occupied 8,000 years ago by nomadic groups, were discovered by archaeologists from the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) in the municipality of Ensenada, Baja California (Mexico). Lithic tools were found at the settlements mainly made out of obsidian, similar to those discovered in Riverside County, California (USA).
The last would verify obsidian exportation conducted by ancient dwellers of Baja California with exchange purposes, informed archaeologist Antonio Porcayo, coordinator of the excavation project at Ensenada, mentioning that several of these sites are located inside caves and were discovered during the recent archaeological salvage work conducted due to the remodeling of San Felipe-Laguna Chapala highway.
Camps are distributed throughout 9 kilometers and correspond to 3 different occupation stages: the earliest is related to fishermen groups that went from the mountain range to the coast of the Sea of Cortes, at least 8,000 years ago. "Among the most relevant aspects of the camps' information is the obsidian exchange they had with other cultural regions, having rock from the nearby deposits found in archaeological sites at Riverside; places where the people that exploited the deposits had never been studied until now," Porcayo said.
The archaeologist explained that the ancient indigenous dwellers did not build constructions; they slept and ate inside the caves, where intact vestiges of the last nomadic groups that dwelled them have been found. Among discovered material are pipe fragments; lithic artifacts like arrowheads; ceramics, and remains of animals consumed by the early South Californians, such as mollusks, sharks, dolphins, deer, wild sheep and pronghorns. A great amount of bonfires were found and the remains will allow scientist to date the various occupation periods.
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