The discoveries are the subject of debate as they apparently contradict the longstanding "
Clovis first" view ( from the 1930s) for the settlement of
humans in the Americas, which holds that the first inhabitants of the continent were representatives of the
Clovis culture, which began roughly 11,500 BP. Discoveries at other sites, such as
Monte Verde,
Chile, dated to 14,800 years BP,
Piedra Museo in the Argentinian province of
Santa Cruz, dated 11,000 years BP,
Topper in the state of
South Carolina, US, dated 16,000–20,000 years BP, and the
Meadowcroft Rockshelter located near
Avella in
Washington County in southwestern
Pennsylvania, United States, dated to 16,000 years BP, have also raised doubts about the "Clovis First" theory. As a result, scholars have proposed alternate scenarios for the routes of colonization and the diffusion of culture through the continents, in a heated dispute that has not been resolved. The mainstream view of the peopling of the Americas, also known as the
short chronology theory, is that the first movement beyond
Alaska into the New World occurred no earlier than 15,000 – 17,000 years ago, followed by successive waves of immigrants. Pedra Furada provides potential evidence for the proponents of the
long chronology theory, which states that the first group of people entered the hemisphere at a much earlier date, possibly 21,000–40,000 years ago, with a much later mass secondary wave of immigrants. This evidence is considered controversial and not widely accepted by experts in the field. A caribou bone used as a scraper, found at the
Old Crow Flats site in Canada and thought to be 27,000 years old, in the 1970s was used to support the
long chronology theory. A re-dating, with more modern techniques in the 1990s came up with an age of 2,000 years. ==Controversy==