Inside three small caves carved into a limestone ridge in northern Yukon, something remarkable was waiting in the sediment — animal bones bearing the unmistakable traces of stone tools. Those cut marks, preserved for roughly 24,000 years, quietly challenge one of the most confident stories archaeologists told about when people first arrived in the Americas.
Key findings
- Bluefish Caves: Located 54 km southwest of Old Crow in Yukon, Canada, the three caves contain animal bones with cut marks consistent with human butchering activity, dated to approximately 24,000 BP — around 22,000 B.C.E.
- Radiocarbon dating: A landmark 2017 C.E. review reanalyzed the site’s faunal remains and confirmed dates of ~24,000 BP, making Bluefish Caves potentially the oldest evidence of human presence in North America.
- Beringian standstill hypothesis: The findings lend support to the idea that ancestors of Indigenous peoples of the Americas spent an extended period sheltering in a Beringian refuge during the Last Glacial Maximum before spreading south.
What Clovis-first got wrong
For decades, the dominant framework in North American archaeology was the Clovis-first model. It held that humans first entered the continent roughly 13,000 years ago, crossing from Asia via a land bridge and rapidly spreading south through an ice-free corridor.
That model was tidy, but the evidence at Bluefish Caves didn’t fit. When archaeologist Jacques Cinq-Mars excavated the site between 1977 C.E. and 1987 C.E., his radiocarbon dates placed animal bones with cut marks at nearly twice the accepted age of first arrival. The archaeology community largely dismissed his findings — not because the data was obviously wrong, but because it contradicted the reigning theory.
It took a generation of accumulating anomalies before the field began to seriously reconsider. Bluefish Caves was one of the most provocative data points pushing that reconsideration forward.
The 2017 reanalysis and what it showed
In 2017 C.E., researcher Lauriane Bourgeon and colleagues published a systematic reanalysis of the Bluefish Caves faunal assemblage in the journal PLOS ONE. They identified cut marks on horse and mammoth bones that were consistent with human butchering — not carnivore gnawing, not natural fracture. The reanalysis confirmed dates of approximately 24,000 BP, making Bluefish Caves the strongest candidate at that time for the earliest known human presence in the Americas.
This wasn’t just a technical revision. It reoriented the entire timeline of when and how people reached the Americas — and pointed toward the Beringian standstill hypothesis as a compelling explanation. Under that model, a founding population crossed into Beringia and then paused — potentially for thousands of years — sheltering in a relatively ice-free refugium while glaciers blocked their southward path. When the ice receded, their descendants spread rapidly across two continents.
The Vuntut Gwitchin, whose traditional territory includes the Bluefish Caves region, have deep ties to this landscape. Their oral histories and ecological knowledge of the Old Crow Flats region — located just 75 km northeast of the caves — reflect a connection to this part of the world that long predates Western academic interest in it.
Lasting impact
The significance of Bluefish Caves extends well beyond a single site or a revised date on a chart. If the ~22,000 B.C.E. occupation holds, it means people were living in the Yukon during the height of the Last Glacial Maximum — one of the coldest, most challenging periods in the last 100,000 years. That is a profound statement about human adaptability.
It also reshapes the story of how the Americas were peopled. A pre-glacial-maximum presence in Beringia is consistent with genetic evidence suggesting Native American founding populations diverged from Asian populations well before 15,000 BP. Archaeology and genetics, coming from different directions, are pointing toward the same picture: the peopling of the Americas was earlier, more complex, and more patient than the Clovis-first model ever allowed.
That matters for how we understand human migration globally — how small groups navigated and survived extreme environments, maintained cultural continuity across millennia of isolation, and ultimately became the ancestors of hundreds of distinct Indigenous nations.
Blindspots and limits
The Bluefish Caves evidence is not without its critics. A paper published after the 2017 C.E. reanalysis raised questions about stratigraphic disturbances and whether the cut marks conclusively indicate human activity rather than other taphonomic processes. The original author responded defending the findings, but the debate has not fully closed.
It is also worth remembering that cut marks on bones show presence — not settlement in any sustained sense. Whether the caves were a short-term hunting camp, a seasonal shelter, or something else entirely, the record does not yet say. The site’s small size — the largest cave is roughly 30 cubic meters — limits how much can be inferred about the people who passed through. And as with much of early American archaeology, the picture is still being assembled, site by site, date by date.
A story still being written
What Bluefish Caves offers is not a clean answer, but a powerful invitation. It asks us to hold more complexity about who was here, how long ago, and what they were capable of surviving. It pushes back against the idea that human history in the Americas began late and arrived in a single wave.
The ongoing reassessment of pre-Clovis sites across North and South America — from Monte Verde in Chile to Meadowcroft Rockshelter in Pennsylvania — suggests Bluefish Caves is part of a much larger revision in the making. Every cut mark, every contested date, every reanalyzed bone fragment is part of humanity learning more about itself.
That is, in itself, a kind of good news.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Bluefish Caves
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights recognition reaches 160 million hectares ahead of COP30
- Rhinos return to Uganda’s Kidepo Valley after decades
- The Good News for Humankind archive on prehistory
About this article
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