Researchers identify oldest bone spear point In the Americas

A team of researchers led by a Texas A&M University professor has determined that the Manis bone projectile point is the oldest bone weapon ever discovered in the Americas, dating back 13,900 years.

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The Manis site mastodon rib with embedded point to the left. © Center for the Study of the First Americans, Texas A&M University

Dr. Michael Waters, distinguished professor of anthropology and head of Texas A&M’s Center for the Study of First Americans, led the team that published their results in Science Advances this week.

The researchers looked at examined bone pieces contained in a mastodon rib bone unearthed by Carl Gustafson during an excavation at the Manis site in Washington state from 1977 to 1979.

Waters and his colleagues identified all the bone fragments using a CT scan and 3D software to prove it was the point of a weapon—a projectile manufactured from the bone of Mastodon, prehistoric relatives of elephants.

“We isolated the bone fragments, printed them out, and assembled them,” Waters said. “This clearly showed this was the tip of a bone projectile point. This is this the oldest bone projectile point in the Americas and represents the oldest direct evidence of mastodon hunting in the Americas.”

Waters said at 13,900 years old, the Manis point is 900 years older than projectile points found to be associated with the Clovis people, whose stone tools he has also studied. Dating from 13,050 to 12,750 years ago, Clovis spear points have been found in Texas and several other sites across the country.

“What is important about Manis is that it’s the first and only bone tool that dates older than Clovis. At the other pre-Clovis site, only stone tools are found,” Waters said. “This shows that the First Americans made and used bone weapons and likely other types of bone tools.”

Bone spear
The team’s reconstruction of the bone point. © Center for the Study of the First Americans, Texas A&M University

He said the only reason the Manis specimen was preserved is because the hunter missed it, and the projectile got stuck in the mastodon’s rib.

“We show that the bone used to make the point appears to have come from the leg bone of another mastodon and was intentionally shaped into a projectile point form,” Waters said. “The spear with the bone point was thrown at the mastodon. It penetrated the hide and tissue and eventually came into contact with the rib. The objective of the hunter was to get between the ribs and impair lung function, but the hunter missed and hit the rib.”

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A mastodon with an arrow pointing to the trajectory of the spear. © Center for the Study of the First Americans, Texas A&M University

Waters studied the rib bone previously, presenting findings in a 2011 paper published in Science, in which radiocarbon dating determined the bone’s age and a genetic study of the bone fragments determined that they were mastodon.

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A close-up angle shows the bone point embedded in the mastodon’s rib. © Center for the Study of the First Americans, Texas A&M University

“In our new study, we set out to isolate the bone fragments using CT images and 3D software,” he said. “We were able to create 3D images of each fragment and print them out at six times scale. Then we fit the pieces back together to show what the specimen looked like before it entered and splintered in the rib.”

Not much is known about the people who used the Manis spearpoint other than they were some of the first Indigenous people to enter the Americas. Waters said the Manis site and others are giving archaeologists some insight.

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CT scan of bone point fragments. © Center for the Study of the First Americans, Texas A&M University

“It is looking like the first people that came to the Americas arrived by boat,” he said. “They took a coastal route along the North Pacific and moved south. They eventually got past the ice sheets that covered Canada and made landfall in the Pacific Northwest.

“It is interesting to note that in Idaho there is the 16,000-year-old Coopers Ferry site, and in Oregon is the 14,100-year-old site of Paisley Caves. And here we report on the 13,900-year-old Manis site. So there appears to be a cluster of early sites in the Northwestern part of the United States that date from 16,000 to 14,000 years ago that predate Clovis. These sites likely represent the first people and their descendants that entered the Americas at the end of the last Ice Age.”