Connected Sites
"The Site Must Have Been Populated By The Early Men Who Populated The American Continent." Rock Art Dated 26,000 - 22,000 Years B.C. (Ab Evaluation)
Caves Of Yagul, Including Guilá Naquitz ("Humans Lived In The Cave Six Separate Timeframes From About 10,750 To 8,900 Years Bp And Again From About 1,300 To 500 Years Bp. The Earlier Inhabitants Were Pre-Ceramic Hunter-Gatherers Who Lived In The Cave Only From August To October–December.", Wiki)
"Dating Of The Occupation Of The Río Pinturas Rock Shelter, Which Has Been Established By
Excavation And Radiocarbon Analysis To C 9300 Bp" (Ab Ev)
"Excavations At Manachaqui Cave, ..., Recovered Evidence Of Very Early Human Occupation, Two Ams Dates Calibrated To Approximately 12,200 And 11,900 Bp" (Wiki)
See En.Wikipedia.Org
See En.Wikipedia.Org
"Pre-Columbian Indians Of Four Cultural Periods Occupied The Park And Its Environs. These Peoples - Mississippian, Woodland, Archaic, And Paleo-Indian - Hunted In The Area That Is Now The Park And Lived In Cave Entrances, Beneath Rock Shelters, And Near Riverbanks." Nomination File
First Occupation 20,000 Years Bp (Wiki); "Human Occupation In El Pinacate Y Grand Desierto De Altar Dates Back To Approximately 40,000 Years Ago (Hayden, 1976, 1998). In This Place, The Occupation And Abandonment Of Land, And Therefore The Use Of Natural Resources, Has Been Linked To Periods Of Drought." (Nom File)
See En.Wikipedia.Org
See En.Wikipedia.Org
Rock Paintings: "The “Abrigo Del Arco” Site Has Been Dated To 19,500 Bce" (Ab Ev)
"On Site, The Paleoindian Period (13,000–10,000 Bp) Is Attested To By A Small Quantity Of Artifacts Of Non-Local Stone." (Ab Ev)