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      Fishtailed projectile points in the Americas: Remarks and hypotheses on the peopling of northern South America and beyond

      Quaternary International
      Elsevier BV

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          Acquisition of cognitive skill.

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            The late Pleistocene dispersal of modern humans in the Americas.

            When did humans colonize the Americas? From where did they come and what routes did they take? These questions have gripped scientists for decades, but until recently answers have proven difficult to find. Current genetic evidence implies dispersal from a single Siberian population toward the Bering Land Bridge no earlier than about 30,000 years ago (and possibly after 22,000 years ago), then migration from Beringia to the Americas sometime after 16,500 years ago. The archaeological records of Siberia and Beringia generally support these findings, as do archaeological sites in North and South America dating to as early as 15,000 years ago. If this is the time of colonization, geological data from western Canada suggest that humans dispersed along the recently deglaciated Pacific coastline.
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              Memory systems of the brain: a brief history and current perspective.

              The idea that memory is composed of distinct systems has a long history but became a topic of experimental inquiry only after the middle of the 20th century. Beginning about 1980, evidence from normal subjects, amnesic patients, and experimental animals converged on the view that a fundamental distinction could be drawn between a kind of memory that is accessible to conscious recollection and another kind that is not. Subsequent work shifted thinking beyond dichotomies to a view, grounded in biology, that memory is composed of multiple separate systems supported, for example, by the hippocampus and related structures, the amygdala, the neostriatum, and the cerebellum. This article traces the development of these ideas and provides a current perspective on how these brain systems operate to support behavior.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Quaternary International
                Quaternary International
                Elsevier BV
                10406182
                March 2021
                March 2021
                : 578
                : 47-72
                Article
                10.1016/j.quaint.2020.06.004
                3c620035-b00a-42dd-845d-b45f0a2f2abb
                © 2021

                https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

                http://www.elsevier.com/open-access/userlicense/1.0/

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