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NOTES 339cide in New Mexico, 1957-1979: A Comparative Study," Human Organization,45 (1986), 296-309; and Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry, Suicide andEthnicity in the United States (New York: Brunner/Mazel, 1989), p. 6.32. Paul Stuart, Nations Within a Nation: Historical Statistics of AmericanIndians (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1987), pp. 15 (Table 2.1), 29 (Table2.15).33. See Susanne Jonas, The Battle for Guatemala: Rebels, Death Squads, andU.S. Power (Boulder: Westview Press, 1991), esp. pp. 103-13, and 145-59.34. For overviews and analyses of some of these matters, see Peter Matthiessen,Indian Country (New York: Viking Press, 1984) and M. Annette Jaimes, ed.,The State of Native America: Genocide, Colonization, and Resistance (Boston:South End Press, 1992).35. "Columbus's Letter to the Sovereigns on His First Voyage, 15 February-4 March, 1493," in Samuel Eliot Morison, ed., Journals and Other Documents onthe Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus (New York: The Heritage Press,1963), p. 182.Appendix I1. For an early summary discussion, see S.K. Lothrop, "Early Migrations toCentral and South America: An Anthropological Problem in the Light of OtherSciences," Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 91 (1961), 97-123.2. J.L. Bada, R.A. Schroeder, and G.F. Carter, "New Evidence for the Antiquityof Man in North America Deduced from Aspartic-Acid Racemization," Science,184 (1974), 791-93; J.L. Bada and P.M. Masters, "Evidence for a 50,000-Year Antiquity of Man in the Americas Derived from Amino-Acid Racemizationin Human Skeletons," in Jonathan E. Ericson, R.E. Taylor, and Rainier Berger,eds., Peopling of the New World (Los Altos, Calif.: BaHena Press, 1982), pp. 171-79.3. RichardS. MacNeish, "Early Man in the New World," American Scientist,63 (1976), 316-27; for convenient summaries of much of the data on this matteras of the early 1980s, see the essays on specific locales in Jesse D. Jennings, ed.,Ancient South Americans (New York: W.H. Freeman and Company, 1983).4. See the overview discussion in Tom D. Dillehay, "A Late Ice-Age Settlementin Southern Chile," Scientific American, 251 (1984), 106-19.5. See William N. Irving and C.R. Harrington, "Upper Pleistocene Radiocarbon­Dated Artifacts from the Northern Yukon," Science, 179 (1973), 335-40; and tworeports by James M. Adovasio: "Excavations at Meadowcroft Rock Shelter, 1973-75: A Progress Report," Pennsylvania Archaeologist, 45 (1975), 1-30; and "MeadowcroftRock Shelter, 1977: An Overview," American Antiquity, 43 (1978), 632-51. For the Missouri site, see M.J. Regan, R.M. Rowlett, E.G. Garrison, W. Dort,Jr., V.M. Bryant, Jr., and C.J. Johannsen, "Flake Tools Stratified Below Paleo­Indian Artifacts," Science, 200 (1978), 1272-75. The Warm Mineral Springs siteis discussed briefly in State of Florida, Division of Archives, History, and RecordsManagement, Archives and History News, 5 (July-August 1974), p. 1.6. N. Guidon and G. Delibrias, "Carbon-14 Dates Point to Man in the Americas32,000 Years Ago," Nature, 321 (1986), 769-71.7. The most detailed discussion of these earliest sites focuses on Monte Verde.

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