Underwater Discovery in Submerged Mexican Cave Provides Glimpse of First Americans

Ice Age skeleton found in an underwater cave in Mexico may help solve a long-standing mystery regarding the identity of the earliest inhabitants of America.
Underwater Discovery in Submerged Mexican Cave Provides Glimpse of First Americans
(Tarik Tinazay/AFP/Getty Images)
5/16/2014
Updated:
5/20/2014

The oldest complete Ice Age skeleton found in an underwater cave in Mexico may help solve a long-standing mystery regarding the identity of the earliest inhabitants of America and how they are related to later Native Americans, according to a new study published in the journal Science.

National Geographic reports that divers were mapping submerged caves in Mexico’s Eastern Yucatan Peninsula around 12 miles north of the city of Tulum, when they came across the most complete skeleton of its age ever found in the Americas, dating back between 12,000 and 13,000 years old. The ancient skeleton, which has been named “Naia” (ancient Greek for ‘water nymph’), belongs to an adolescent girl who fell more than 100 feet to her death nearly a half mile inside an elaborate network of caves that were largely dry at the end of the Pleistocene era.

The skeleton is incredible significant as it has enabled scientists to connect an early American skeleton with modern Native American DNA for the first time, suggesting that the earliest Americans are indeed close relatives of modern Native Americans and provides new clues as to how the Americas were first populated.

One of the greatest mysteries surrounding Native American ancestry is the fact that ancient skulls found in the Americas are larger, and their faces narrower and more forward-projecting than those of modern Native Americas. In fact, the features of ancient skulls more closely resemble native peoples of Africa, Australia, and the southern Pacific Rim than they do their supposed American descendants. This has led some experts to argue that Native Americans arrived in a later migration to the earliest inhabitants, who came from elsewhere.

However, the newly discovered skeleton contains both the craniofacial features of ancient Paleoamericans and mitochondrial DNA possessed by later Native Americans (haplogroup D1). This suggests that the differences in features between Paleoamericans and modern Native Americans may be the result of evolutionary changes over a period of some 9,000 years, rather than being the result of separate migrations from south-east Asia or even Europe. 

The skeleton was initially studied underwater using photography, videography and three-dimensional modelling. But due to risks posed by unauthorized dives in the area, the skull and other bones were removed from the cave and further studied by an international team of anthropologists, archaeologists, geneticists, and geologists led by anthropologist James Chatters, owner of Applied Paleoscience. He was also the first to study Kennewick Man, a 9,300-year-old skeleton found in Washington in 1996. Kennewick Man also shows distinctive Paleoamerican traits rather than modern Native American traits, which has resulted in a nearly decade long legal and scientific battle regarding who he belongs to and where he originated.

While the results of the study provide solid evidence that ‘Naia’ was maternally related to Native Americans today (haplogroup D1 is only found within this population), to suggest that this proves that there were no earlier inhabitants of the Americas is far too great a leap. Naia may have been the result of interbreeding between two distinct populations that co-existed for a time, accounting for why she has both Paleoamerican features and Native American DNA, a possibility that has not even been mentioned by reports. Therefore it cannot yet be concluded that the differences in skull features between Paleoamericans and later Native Americans is accounted for simply by evolution.

Republished from Ancient Origins with permission.