Science, Vol.331, No.6020, 1058-1062, 2011
A Terminal Pleistocene Child Cremation and Residential Structure from Eastern Beringia
The dearth of human remains and residential sites has constrained inquiry into Beringian lifeways at the transition of the late Pleistocene-early Holocene. We report on human skeletal remains and a residential structure from central Alaska dated to similar to 11,500 calendar years ago. The remains are from a similar to 3-year-old child who was cremated in a pit within a semisubterranean house. The burial-cremation and house have exceptional integrity and preservation and exhibit similarities and differences to both Siberian Upper Paleolithic and North American Paleoindian features.