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Old Cordilleran culture

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The Old Cordilleran Culture, also known as the Cascade phase, is an ancient culture of Native Americans that settled in the Pacific Northwest that existed from 9000 or 10000 BC until about 5500 BC. It is thought it may be even older, depending on when human beings first arrived in America. They originated in Alaska, and migrated to occupy a wide area as far as Idaho and the plateaus of California, but they are generally not considered to be a maritime society. However their spearpoints, or at least what resembles them, have been found as far as Mexico and South America.[1] This was the typical artifact of these people—a simple, bifacial, leaf-shaped projectile point which average about 6 cm in length. These tools were used as spears or darts, or also knives, indicating the importance of hunting, although in general they also fished and gathered for subsistence. However the main dependence was on land hunting, mostly of deer, bison, and othr large mammals.[2][3] The culture was possibly spoke a Macro-Penutian language, a parent of Penutian, Utaztecan, and other language families.[1] This culture also created the oldest attested examples of art in the Pacific Northwest.[4]

Notes

  1. ^ a b Josephy, Alvin M (August 26, 1991). The Indian Heritage of America. Houghton Mifflin Books. ISBN 0395573203. p. 132
  2. ^ "Old Cordilleran culture." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2006.
  3. ^ Minnesota State University, EMuseum. Old Cordilleran. (URL accessed July 19, 2006).
  4. ^ Keyser, James D. (July 1, 1992). Indian Rock Art of the Columbia Plateau. University of Washington Press. ISBN 0295971606. pps. 24-5.