DUNE MIGRATION, PROJECTILE POINTS AND PALEOSOLS, A VIEW OF WHAT LAYS BENEATH THE SOUTH TEXAS SAND SHEET
An isolated migrating dune at the center of the STSS, has exhumed projectile points and abundant debitage, indicating human presence and perhaps a rich archaeological record buried beneath the sand. Preliminary findings from an ongoing investigation at this unique site include: 1) evidence of human occupation, dating back to the Early Archaic (Abasolo projectile points) and perhaps Paleoindian times, suggested by a single Golondrinas point. 2) the archaeological horizon sits on a well-developed paleosol, formed on a vegetated eolian deposit, indicative of a wetter climate and a stable landscape, and 3) a period of landscape instability between ~11,000 and ~4,000(?) years before present constrained by four optically stimulated luminescence ages from the buried dune. The lack of organic materials, which were likely lost to deflation, has precluded establishing an absolute chronology for the time of human occupation.