Vance Holliday and others in this email exchange have kindly allowed me to post their chatter to the Tusk.
I will clean it up later. But for now – here you go…..
On 9/24/2010 2:38 PM, Vance Holliday wrote:
Richard:
All I asked was why is it that when us skeptics can’t reproduce
data or confirm hypothesis for The Impact Team we are accused of slipshod
science or incompetence, yet The Impact team seems to always find what
they are looking for??? Has anyone on The Impact Team critically looked
at their own data? Questioned their hypothesis? Isn’t that was science
is about?
And are we really expected to believe that Vance Haynes can’t
find the Black Mat???
I guess I could just as easily say to you “Fortunately science
is not based on opinions but instead on measurements. Dozens of scientists
bringing unique skills to the subject have provided an enormous amount of
experimental data providing no support for the idea of an impact at the
onset of the YDB. A few, highly biased scientists threw together some
slipshod experiments to support their hypothesis.”
I must confess to growing very weary of unsubstantiated
accusations of incompetence, slipshod science, and bias toward everyone
who doesn’t buy or who presents data contrary to the YD Impact
Hypothesis. All of the people who tested the hypothesis and came up
wanting or those who tried to reproduce the data are just trying to figure
out what is going on. I know many of them. All are highly respected in
their various fields. None had any biases or agendas that I am aware of.
What is your basis for calling them “highly biased”? On what basis do
you decide that their experiments are “slipshod”? Because their data
don’t confirm yours???
Like most of the skeptics (I am guessing), I don’t actually care
whether there was an impact or not. I just want to know one way or another
because a lot of my work deals with the late Pleistocene/early Holocene.
But good science requires that new ideas be questioned and tested.
Apparently we are all supposed to uncritically buy everything we are told
by The Impact Team.
You repeatedly asked me to explain that long list of apparent
contradictions. I don’t have to. When proposing a new hypothesis,
especially an “outrageous hypothesis,” the burden of proof is on your
team to explain inconsistencies. So far it seems that most of you have
decided to simply accuse all skeptics of not knowing what we are doing
rather questioning your own work.
But I’ll address a couple of your questions that I know something about.
How else do you explain how Haynes found enormous concentrations
of iridium in the metallic fraction that he reported peaked at the YDB,
higher concentrations than we reported, yet he dismissed as somehow
unrelated?
That is easy. I’ll let Vance answer using his own words from his
Reply in PNAS. You should read it, too (or is he also under suspicion?).
We consider our iridium analytical results of 64 ppb and 31 ppb to not be
anomalous because they are less than the 72 ppb for magnetics from the
modern stream bed.
So, is Vance’s Ir data from the stratigraphic section “good science”
while his data from the modern arroyo channel is “slipshod”???
See: Reply to Firestone et al.: No confirmation of impact at the lower
Younger Dryas boundary at Murray Springs, AZ PNAS 2010 107 (26) E106;
published ahead of print June 8, 2010,
How do you explain why according to Stafford’s and Waters’
radiocarbon dating the Clovis people simultaneously disappeared in both
North and South America at the onset of the YD?
Three answers. First, Clovis people didn’t do that. Five sites
(Mu Spgs, Sheridan Cave, Mill Iron, Lehner, Jake Bluff) out of their
“top 25″ (20%) from their Table 1 are less than 12.9k Second, there was
no Clovis occupation of South America. Third, their dating is not the last
word on the age range of Clovis. It is their estimate based on their
selection criteria of available bone. It is good work but a lot of us
think the age range is longer and that they excluded some very good dates
from some very good sites.
See: Comment on “Redefining the Age of Clovis: Implications for the
Peopling of the Americas” Gary Haynes, David G. Anderson, C. Reid Ferring,
Stuart J. Fiedel, Donald K. Grayson, C. Vance Haynes, Jr., Vance T.
Holliday, Bruce B. Huckell, Marcel Kornfeld, David J. Meltzer, Julie
Morrow, Todd Surovell, Nicole M. Waguespack, Peter Wigand, and Robert M.
Yohe, II 20 July 2007 317: 320 [DOI: 10.1126/science.1141960] (in
Technical Comments)
Why are the enormous deep holes in the Great Lakes that radiate
perpendicular to the mid Continent rift not possible evidence of the
missing craters?
First, you should ask a structural geologist about this.
Otherwise, in reference to the “holes,” I saw that you suggest that
“deep holes” beneath four of the Great Lakes could represent impact
craters (in Journal of Siberian Federal University: Engineering &
Technologies Firestone et al. 2010). You dismiss the possibility these
holes were the result of glacial erosion, citing the latest edition of
Dawson’s Acadian Geology, a book published more than a century ago
(Dawson 1891)! Evidently, you believe subsequent generations of glacial
and Quaternary geologists working in the Great Lakes failed to notice the
holes’ extraterrestrial origin. Yet, if these holes were caused by an
impact 12,900 years ago (and you provide no evidence the holes are that
old), it is curious that the impacts produced elongated craters at
different orientations, yet each one parallel to local ice flow in the
up-ice end of its lake basin. Well, at least the latest edition of Dawson,
1891, was used!
The interesting thing is that all of the detractors have set
themselves up for infamy in the history of science as the truth comes out.
Really??? Is that how science works? The losing side of a
scientific debate ends up in “infamy”? Wow. I wish I was told that in
graduate school. I would have gone into the aluminum siding business.
I’d like to present my own questions and comments to you, based
on quotes directly from some of your papers. Over the past year or two, as
I have gone back to the Firestone, West, and Warwick-Smith book Cosmic
Catastrophe and the 2007 Firestone et al paper in PNAS (the only two
comprehensive statements on the YD Impact hypothesis; neither of which was
peer-reviewed). I’ve come across what are best described as
“interesting” comments or assertions:
COSMIC CATASTROPHE
When I first came across The Cycle of Cosmic Catastrophes: Flood,
Fire, and Famine in the History of Civilization I casually flipped through
it and kept coming across comments that I knew to be misstatements if not
grossly in error. Quote clearly, “facts” were fitted into preconceived
ideas. For example, my own research on playas was completely misstated and
what was purported to be my conclusions was essentially the opposite of
what I said! They state (P 216) that because I had a suite of radiocarbon
dates from “the underlying formation” (i.e., from below the fill in
the playa basins, which they mistakenly refer to as “salty salinas”),
then these depressions must have formed at about the same time as the
Carolina Bays (according to their discussion elsewhere, at about 12.9ka)
and they must have been formed by the impact Event. The problem with this
interpretation (as well as interpretations of the Bays – see below) is
that my dates were from the playa fills, which is very clear throughout
the paper, and therefore the depressions must be older than 12.9k. How
could something so clear and straightforward be so stunningly
misrepresented???
The dating of the Carolina Bays was largely ignored or misstated
(p. 127). One minute on the internet turned up three GSA abstracts with
OSL dates clearly showing that the sand rims around some Bays date to
between 15,000 and 40,000 years BPÂ and betw 70,000 and 80,000 years BP.
Some were rims active “during multiple phases over the past 100,000
years” (Ivester et al, 2004, GSA Abstracts).
But also on p. 127 of The Book, the following statement is
presented: “All of the evidence fits our theory that the rims and bays
formed all at the same instant [i.e., by an “extraterrestrial event”
at around 12.9k]. In support of that, Ivester and coworkers (2003) dated
two bay rims to 11,300 and 12,630 years ago using OSL… We used the same
technique to date two levels of…Bay rim sand… the [OSL) Dating
Laboratory at the University of Washington reported that the ‘highest
age (11,400+/-6100 years) is close to the age of Clovis…’”
This passage contains so much misleading and misunderstood
information that it is hard to know how to start sorting it out.
Luminescence dating produces ages in calendar years, so OSL dates of
11,300 an 12,630 are too young for the “Event” at 12.9k. The mean of
the date determined by the Impact Team at UW is far too young for the
“Event” but moreover, absolutely meaningless given that the standard
deviation is over 50% of the mean age! But the grossest distortion is the
reference to the work of Ivester et al. In that paper they clearly state
that they are looking at multiple rims formed around some Bays. “Four
concentric rims along the margin of one Bay… selected for dating have
ages of 35,660+ or -2600; 25,210+ or -1900; 11,160+ or -900; and 2,150+ or
-300 years ago…The trend of younger sand rims toward the bay center
indicates that the bay has shrunk in area over the last 36,000 years… An
additional date of 20,390+ or -1600 years documents eolian reworking of
sediment associated with an adjacent bay to the southwest. Another new
luminescence date from the Carolina bay rim bordering Arabia Bay in
southern Georgia shows the rim was active 12,630+ or -1000 years ago.
These dates indicate bay rims were periodically active well after the
maximum advance of the Wisconsin ice sheet.” A rather remarkable
twisting of words. The dates cited by Ivester et al clearly do not pertain
to the initial formation of any Bay.
The Paleoindian archaeological record in the southeastern U.S. is
described as “well dated” (p. 113). Further (also on p. 113), Al
Goodyear is quoted as saying “…I’m noticing a big drop in the
incidence of spear points dating from right after that time” (13,000
years ago).
This was a surprise because that is flatly not the case. There is
almost no good stratigraphic or radiocarbon record for Clovis and its
variants in the Southeast. Look at any paper or book on the topic. The
artifact style Goodyear was referring to (Redstone) has no numerical age
control at all! Al thinks that it is post-Clovis but it is not dated (Al
told me that last year!).
On to the Blackwater Draw site (Clovis site) in New Mexico. A
visit to the site includes the following description (p. 73):
“18 inches” above the “Event” zone is a ledge “jammed with
spears, tools, and bone.”
I’ve spent a lot of time at the Clovis site, much of it involving
stratigraphic work. There is no such “ledge.”
And this assertion (also on p. 73): “Eight radiocarbon dates
indicated that no humans had visited Blackwater Draw for more than 1000
years.”
There is simply no evidence for this whatsoever. What dates? From
where??? The considerable work at the site by my colleague C.V. Haynes,
and many others, apparently was ignored.
After simply paging through the book and seeing all this
misrepresentation of scientific data and scientific fact, and wholesale
distortion of the work of others, my skepticism began to emerge!
But there’s more! The Firestone et al paper in PNAS, 2007,
contains equally distorted statements.
p.16017: â€œTen Clovis and equivalent-age sites were selected because of
their long-established archeological and paleontological significance,
and, hence, most are well documented and dated by previous researchers.”
In fact, very few of these sites could be considered to have
“long-established archeological and paleontological significance.”
The Clovis site and Murray Springs are arguably the only two.
Morley has no archaeological or paleontological significance
Topper, neither the archaeology nor the geology of the Clovis level has
been published; little has
been published on any aspect of the site.
Daisey Cave is an important archaeological site, but as indicated in the
SI, was not occupied
before 11.5ka
Gainey is probably an important site, but is poorly published.
Chobot is very poorly published
Lake Hind has minimal archaeological significance, no paleontological
significance, and is poorly
known.
P. 16019: “The YDB at the 10 Clovis- and equivalent-age sites has been
well dated to 12.9 ka. “
This is a key point because the hypothesis fundamentally rests on
a demonstration that the layers in question with the purported impact
markers are all of exactly the same age, or at least as close to
“exactly” as modern numerical dating methods (chiefly radiocarbon) can
get. But in fact few of the layers are “well dated to 12.9 ka.” (This
is clearly indicated in the SI to the PNAS paper). The North American
sites are:
Murray Springs, AZ
Blackwater Draw, NMÂ Â Â Â No dates directly linked to sampled section
Daisey Cave, CA
Wally’s Beach, Alberta         â€œNone of the Paleoindian points
recovered was in situ and therefore it is not possible to directly link
the points with the [dated] faunal remains” (Kooyman et al. 2001, 687).
Gainey, MIÂ Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â No Black Mat, no dates, no obvious
indication of a 12.9ka level
Topper, SCÂ Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â No BM and no dates
Chobbot, Alberta                No dates
Lake Hind, Manitoba
Morley, Alberta                 No dates
15 Carolina Bays                No dates
Several of these sites are “dated” by presence of Clovis artifacts,
but that provides no precise indication of the 12.9ka level because the
Clovis occupation was at least several centuries. So using the archaeology
as an age indicator, given the necessity for precise dating, is circular
reasoning.
Five of the nine sites (over 50%) have no numerical age control whatsoever
or no direct numerical age control on the YDB layers; no age control of
any kind is reported for the 15 Carolina Bays (0%).
p. 16017: “Each of the 10 Clovis-age sites displays a YDB layer (average
thickness of 3 cm).”
This is impossible to verify because sampling intervals and
stratigraphic descriptions have never been provided. The comment that the
average thickness of the “YDB layer” is 3 cm is significant in light
of subsequent critiques of sampling by others.
p. 16017: â€œWe further suggest that the catastrophic effects of this ET
event and associated biomass burning led to abrupt YD cooling, contributed
to the late Pleistocene megafaunal extinction, promoted human cultural
changes, and led to immediate decline in some post-Clovis human
populations.”
The extinction issue is very complicated and in fact no recently
published data shows a synchronous extinction. At the recent AMQUA
meetings, Russ Graham and Tom Stafford (who has also co-authored with some
of the Impact proponents) presented a paper with the latest radiocarbon
dates showing that most fauna was gone by 12.9k and that some mammoth
survived after 12.9. And there is also the work of Gill (2010, Science)
showing that mammoth and other herbivores in the Midwest were on the
decline long before 12.9k (and that work followed other work in the
Northeast showing the same thing).
Moreover, the reference to post-Clovis human population decline is
based on a two-page paper on Redstone artifacts which, as indicated above,
are presumed to be post-Clovis in age (Goodyear, 2006). As noted above,
Redstone is not dated at all.
p. 16018: â€œCharcoal displays peaks in the YDB at eight of nine
Clovis-age sites and is present in 15 of 15 Bays, reaching peaks in four
Bays with paleosols.”
And from the Supplemental Information: â€œThe Bays have poorly
stratified, sandy, elevated rims (up to 7 m) that often are higher to the
southeast. All of the Bay rims examined were found to have, throughout
their entire 1.5- to 5-m sandy rims, a typical assemblage of YDB markers
(magnetic grains, magnetic microspherules, Ir, charcoal, soot, glass-like
carbon, nanodiamonds, carbon spherules, and fullerenes with 3 He).”
The sandy Bay rims are described as “poorly stratified” and
yet some have “buried paleosols.” Which is it? And all Bay rims
sampled have YDB markers throughout, including, presumably, the buried
soils? What does that mean? The Bay rims can’t be used as evidence if
they contain no discrete impact marker layer. The comment suggests that
YDB markers can be found outside of discrete contexts, negating their
significance.
p. 16019: “At Murray Springs, Haynes… first reported the presence of
glass-like or ‘vitreous’ carbon in the black mat. In addition, he
chemically analyzed the black mat layer, concluding that it most likely
resulted from the decomposition of charred wood and/or a prolonged algal
bloom, both of which could result from event-related processes (e.g.,
climate change and biomass burning). Some black mats have no algal
component, only charcoal.”
Haynes clearly describes the black mat as an algal layer (and this
is so stated in the SI to the 2007 PNAS paper). How does an algal bloom
result from “event-related processes”? Algal blooms occur all the
time on the Earth’s surface and almost all in the absence of any
extraterrestrial event.
p. 16020: “if multiple 2-km objects struck the 2-km-thick Laurentide Ice
Sheet at <30°, they may have left negligible traces after deglaciation…
[perhaps]Â limited to enigmatic depressions or disturbances in the
Canadian Shield (e.g., under the Great Lakes or Hudson Bay)”
An obvious flaw with that speculation is that by 12,900 years ago
only the Lake Superior basin was still under glacial ice, a fact
well-known and very well documented for decades!
16021: “For humans, major adaptive shifts are evident at 12.9 ka, along
with an inferred population decline, as subsistence strategies changed
because of dramatic ecological change and the extinction, reduction, and
displacement of key prey species.”
I and other Paleoindian specialists are very familiar with the
North American literature so this was news to us. But sometimes you
don’t see what you are not looking for, so several of us delved in to
the Paleoindian literature so see if these claims have any merit
(discussed below). As noted above, this notion was initially based on
Paleoindian artifact data from the Southeast U.S. This was a surprise
because there is almost no good stratigraphic or radiocarbon record for
Paleoindian archaeology in that region. Much of our work has been on the
Great Plains, which has the best dated regional stratigraphic record of
Paleoindian occupation in North America, so we decided to test the
hypothesis with data from the Great Plains. We see no evidence of any sort
of occupation hiatus at 12.9ka. The end of the Clovis point style tells us
nothing about an impact, and in any case the style persists after 12.9ka.
Arguments that stratified sites with a post-Clovis occupation hiatus
misstate the archaeological and geological records. At sites with multiple
Paleoindian occupations, “sterile” layers between occupation zones are
the norm, whether they separate Clovis from Folsom zones, Folsom from
other Folsom occupations, or any combination of occupations you care to
mention. Moreover, out of >150 Paleoindian sites we looked at in the
literature, over two-thirds are single occupation sites. So whether they
are Clovis, Folsom or late Paleoindian features, there is no occupation
above. Absence of a post-Clovis occupation is not a mysterious
“hiatus,” it is the norm at most Paleoindian sites.
Another general question about the data from impact markers in the
PNAS paper: Why the multiple peaks among the various indicators? E.g.,
double carbon spherule and double charcoal peaks at Chobot; the magnetic
grain and spherule peak higher than the main carbon spherule peak at
Chobot; two Iridium peaks and one carbon spherue peak mathing neither IR
peak at Lake Hind; and a variety of spikes that don’t match up at
Topper. How exactly did that happen? A single “event” should sprinkle
its traces across the continent at the same time (the proponents make this
point over and over). Yet they rarely occur together in the sites. I know
of no sedimentological or weathering process that could so discretely
vertically sort the various indicators.
.
So, please explain to me again;Â who is producing slipshod
science?
Vance Holliday
Vance T. Holliday  http://www.argonaut.arizona.edu/
School of Anthropology & Department of Geosciences
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
At 11:20 AM 9/15/2010, rbfirestone wrote:
Vance:
Thanks for your opinion. Fortunately science is not based on opinions but
instead on measurements. Dozens of scientists bringing unique skills to
the subject have provided an enormous amount of experimental data
supporting an impact at the onset of the YDB. A few, highly biased
scientists threw together some slipshod experiments that still basically
supported the earlier work but yet were interpreted as proof that nothing
happened. How else do you explain how Haynes found enormous
concentrations of iridium in the metallic fraction that he reported peaked
at the YDB, higher concentrations than we reported, yet he dismissed as
somehow unrelated? How do you explain that when Kurbatov et al found a
massive peak of nanodiamonds at the YDB in Greenland ice it doesn’t count
yet when Daulton et al found nothing in Scott’s samples it is somehow
meaningful? How do you explain why Pinter is allowed to make outrageous
claims that the magnetic spherules are normal cosmic dust when nobody ever
finds these spherules elsewhere in sediment, the generally accepted influx
of cosmic dust is too low to account for a significant concentration in
sediment, and the composition of the YDB metallic spherules is not the
same as cosmic dust?  How do you explain why, according to Haynes, there
are no fossils of extinct mammoths and megafauna within or above the black
mat and it is as if all were gone in an instant? How do you explain why
according to Stafford’s and Waters’ radiocarbon dating the Clovis people
simultaneously disappeared in both North and South America at the onset of
the YD? How do you explain why Bill Napier’s comet impact theories, which
can be buttressed by strong evidence of a major increase in recent
impacts, can be wrong while Mark Boslough’s suggestion that large impacts,
including presumably the K-T, never happen could be correct? Why are the
enormous deep holes in the Great Lakes that radiate perpendicular to the
midContinent rift not possible evidence of the missing craters? Why are
Pete Schultz’s expermental evidence that high velocity impacts into ice
don’t necessarily produce craters wrong and Boslough’s theories right?
How do you explain the evidence of high-temperature burning in Greenland
ice, highest in over 100,000 years, and the high concentrations of soot in
the YDB layer not seen since the K-T? The absence of evidence in the
detractors of the YD impact papers is not evidence of absence, especially
when there is a wealth of positive evidence from all kinds of places. The
interesting thing is that all of the detractors have set themselves up for
infamy in the history of science as the truth comes out. More data is
about to emerge from sites around the world.
Regards,
Rick Firestone
PS. I do agree with the bottled water sentiments. Our conspicuous
consumption of Earth’s resources needs to stop.
“The money Americans spend on bottled water could pay for bringing fresh
water to all the people in the world who need it.”  — Lester Brown,
Earth Policy Institute
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
On 9/15/2010 10:30 AM, Vance Holliday wrote:
Gentlemen:Â Several weeks ago Mark Boslough forwarded comments on the
“YDB” and Vance Haynes sampling at Murray Springs. Whoo boy… Poor old
Vance Haynes, stumbling and bumbling around a site he worked on for over
40 years and he couldn’t find the Black Mat! But when Allen West came
out they went right to the section/samples Allen needed. Good thing he got
Vance straightened out!!
I guess the older we get the less we know about our sites. In my case
I’ve been working on the archaeology and geology at Lubbock Lake in
Texas since the 70s. When I sampled for the YDB I submitted identical
blind splits to both Todd Surovell and to Doug and Jim Kennett. When
results came back from Kennett’s lab that were at odds with what they
expected, the immediate response was that I mislabeled the bag and/or
missampled the section and/or didn’t understand the stratigraphy. Poor,
poor, pitiful me… Well obviously someone with no experience at the site
needs to straighten me out.
I am so glad that The Impact Team regularly and routinely finds exactly
what it wants to find when it samples, and never makes mistakes.
Apparently the rest of us routinely and regularly get it wrong in the
field and in the lab. How exactly does that work???
Vance Holliday
Professor of Anthropology & Geosciences
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
From: “Boslough, Mark B” <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, 31 Aug 2010 14:54:39 -0600
Subject: Firestone responds
Y’all might be interested in Firestone’s reaction to the latest.
Mark
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
From: Richard Firestone [ mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, August 31, 2010 12:56 PM
To: Hermann Burchard
Subject: Re: CORRECTION: was Re: Fw: Re: Impact hypothesis loses its
sparkle
Hermann:
Haynes didn’t know exactly where the YD impact layer is since it is mm’s
thick and not exactly at the base of the black mat due to turbation of the
horizon after the event. Haynes did however see even higher levels of Ir
than we reported in the magnetic fraction which confirmed out work.
Daulton et al isolated microcharcoal aggragates at Murray Springs,
whatever those are, and not the carbon spherules that contain the
nanodiamonds. It is not clear where they got the Arlington samples since
they communicated with nobody associated with the original paper and just
went fishing for data. Examining only two specimens of whatever they
found for nanodiamonds was insufficient because only 1 in 10 of carbon
spherules were expected to contain them. Kennett’s nanodiamond analysis
from many sites including those reported by Daulton and Kurbatov’s results
from Greenland are unambiguous proof of their presence in the YD impact
layer. Daulton’s negative result proves nothing except that they couldn’t
find their way to the YD impact layer. I’ve attached a copy of the
Kurbatov paper.
Rick
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 10:49 AM, Hermann Burchard
< [email protected] > wrote:
Leroy,
attached please find PDF copy of the Daulton-Pinter-Scott paper from
PNAS on nanodiamonds. There is the footnote mentioned by Rick Firestone:
“This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.”
About peer-review, there is the note under the title:
“Edited by Mark H. Thiemens, University of California at San
Diego, La Jolla, CA, and approved July 27, 2010 (received for review
March 24, 2010)”
Also, his comment regarding difficulties with obtaining correct samples
from the site at Murray Springs, AZ is interesting. The authors state
they relied on Haynes et al for dating their samples “from the base of
black mat sediment layer at the same locality and stratum.”
Hermann
On Tue, 31 Aug 2010, Leroy Ellenberger wrote:
CORRECTION: Contrary to my previous email, Firestone informs me that
Daulton’s PNAS paper was peer reviewed. I apologize for this error.
CLE
“The money Americans spend on bottled water could pay for bringing fresh
water to all the people in the world who need it.”
Lester Brown, Earth Policy Institute
“The money Americans spend on bottled water could pay for bringing fresh water to all the people in the world who need it.”
Lester Brown, Earth Policy Institute
Vance T. Holliday  http://www.argonaut.arizona.edu/
School of Anthropology & Department of Geosciences
University of Arizona
Office in Anthropology:
P.O. Box 210030Â (U.S. Mail)
1009 E. South Campus Drive (Overnight delivery)
Tucson AZÂ 85721-0030
office   520-621-4734
dept     520-621-2585
fax      520-621-2088
Vance:
I’ll take something positive from what you said. It is fine to be skeptical as long as you leave open the possibility that we are right, which you did.
Haynes showed convincingly that no megafauna fossils exist within or above the black mat. He argues that this was due to a sudden, catastrophic event. It is difficult to know what other contributing events may have occurred during the short period of Clovis occupation before the YD.
Stafford and Waters showed that Clovis-age occupation ended nearly simultaneously in North and South America 12,900 years ago. That says nothing about who or what disappeared. The people may well have survived beyond this point but it is clear that they stopped hunting megafauna then. There is certainly a problem with the lack of data, data selection, and radiocarbon dating methods. Many may not realize that Stafford and Waters used their own radiocarbon calibration methods, not INTCAL which would have given different results. My opinion is that nobody can do radiocarbon dating to better than 100-200 years, 13 kyr ago, due to the many uncertainties in the radiocarbon record for different locations and experimental problems.
Rick Firestone
“The money Americans spend on bottled water could pay for bringing fresh water to all the people in the world who need it.”
Lester Brown, Earth Policy Institute
Vance T. Holliday  http://www.argonaut.arizona.edu/
School of Anthropology & Department of Geosciences
University of Arizona
Office in Anthropology:
P.O. Box 210030Â (U.S. Mail)
1009 E. South Campus Drive (Overnight delivery)
Tucson AZÂ 85721-0030
office  520-621-4734
dept    520-621-2585
fax     520-621-2088