
Solutrean Hypothesis
Bob Berglund with the Torrance County Archaeological Society makes a compelling case that Clovis people were not the first people in the Americas.
The “Solutrean hypothesis” is that people living in Europe on the coast of Spain and southern France 15,000 to 25,000 years ago worked their way north and across the Atlantic along the edge of the ice and into North America—and that these Solutrean people brought with them a unique method of making stone tools.
On Demand Performance - KXNM archives Archaeology In Your Backyard as MP3 files, allowing you to listen to your favorite shows on demand, whenever you choose. Click on the audio file below to hear the story about the Solutrean Hypothesis, or click on the Download File to read the whole story
Bob Berglund with the Torrance County Archaeological Society makes a compelling case that Clovis people were not the first people in the Americas.
The “Solutrean hypothesis” is that people living in Europe on the coast of Spain and southern France 15,000 to 25,000 years ago worked their way north and across the Atlantic along the edge of the ice and into North America—and that these Solutrean people brought with them a unique method of making stone tools.
On Demand Performance - KXNM archives Archaeology In Your Backyard as MP3 files, allowing you to listen to your favorite shows on demand, whenever you choose. Click on the audio file below to hear the story about the Solutrean Hypothesis, or click on the Download File to read the whole story

archaeology_-_solutrean_hypothesis.docx |