After a long and frequently hot discussion, the archaeologist eventually reached a consensus that humans arrived in South Chile 12,500 years ago. In the 1930s the first stone of 11,200 years was discovered near Clovis, New Mexico. The ruins of Chile is called Monteverde and it is on the beach. A stream of hills with thick trees near the Pacific Ocean. Even previous skeptics agree that their ancient conditions are currently being established and the bones and stone tools and other materials found there are certainly showing the existence of hunting and gathering personnel.
Researchers found evidence at an Monteverde factory in Chile that ancient residents are seafood fans 10. "There are ten kinds of seaweed in the grounds of Monteverde," says Dillehay. "Someone is very familiar with seaweeds and the micro-habitats where they can be found." He said that this helped to support the oldest American as sailors. According to Mr. Waters, Mr. Dillehay's recent findings were discovered after the first 30 years of excavation in Monteverde, and that the location of the previous survey may be a potential gold mine Respectively. In the era of "Clovis-First", as many Web sites were dismissed or forgotten, Mr. Waters said, "Looking back at the Web site on the shelf, you can truly promote this field," Stated. He plans to resume the ruins of Tennessee and Florida, where evidence of Crovis' s mammoth hunt was discovered in the 1980s and 1990s.
The forefront of the old Clovis ruins in South America is Monteverde, Chile. This place, first discovered by Tom Dillehay of the University of Kentucky in the 1970s, is a village of bones and stone relics. Seeds, fruits, shellfish, as well as poultry and storage of extinct camels and mastodons, footprints of children in the mud have been found. Dillehay set the site date 12,500 years ago. Monteverde lies on a hill overlooking the lagoon and the pond and is actually a place where they overlap each other. The second level will be 30,000 years. However, Dillehay is very reluctant to do such a request seriously without further work.
Tom Dillehay has been investigating the ruins of Monte Verde in Chile for many years. These documents provide the earliest evidence of human occupation in the United States, derived from 14 (500 years ago) (proofread) literary materials. This early event occurred at the site of Monte Verde II, and there was abundant cultural evidence including at least two buildings, human footprints and many relics. It is widely considered as the earliest evidence of human settlements in South America.