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5. Stone microblades, or microblade segments, inset in grooves of
the antler point to from a cutting edge.
6. Frozen Tanana River in interior Alaska.
7. Line drawing of American Paleoarctic tradition artifacts from
Component II of the Dry Creek site.
8. Roger Powers and students excavating at Panguingue Creek.
9. Location of archeological sites and locales mentioned in the
text.
10. Tom Loy at work in his lab at Victoria, B.C.
11. Line drawings of hemoglobin crystals used to identify large run
down mammal species.
12. Dick Jordan, Dennis Stanford, and James Dixon at the Walker
Road site, one of the type sites for the Nenana complex.
13. Line drawing of Nenana complex artifacts from Dry Creek,
Component I, and Walker Road, Component I.
14. Chuck Holmes at the Broken Mammoth site.
15. David Yesner during excavations at the Broken Mammoth site.
16. The location of sites related to the Nenana complex.
17. Artifacts from the Jay Creek Ridge site.
18. Artifacts typologically ascribed to the Nenana complex.
19. Reconstruction of 13,000 B.P settlement at Monte Verde.
20. Artifacts from the 33,000 B.P levels at Monte Verde.
21. Possible Pleistocene age artifacts recovered from Pedra Furada,
Brazil, ca. 32,000 B.P.
22. Residue analysis of the fluted projectile points from eastern
Beringia.
23. Some of the fluted projectile points analyzed in this study.
24. Northern distribution of fluted point locales.
25. Northeastern Asia and northwestern North America, illustrat-
ing early Holocene distribution of significant traditions.
26. The North Pacific and the Americas, ca. 14,000 B.P.
27. The western South Pacific, depicting islands on which
Pleistocene age archeological sites have been discovered.

-x-

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Publication Information: Book Title: Quest for the Origins of the First Americans. Contributors: E. James Dixon - author. Publisher: University of New Mexico Press. Place of Publication: Albuquerque. Publication Year: 1993. Page Number: x.
    
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