o be clear, the opinion of most archaeologists is that the first humans in the Americas came from Asia over the Beringia land bridge and then along the coast of the New World, perhaps by boat, in several waves of immigration starting around roughly 18,000 BCE. The preponderance of evidence, even genetic and linguistic, supports this theory, broadly. There is no evidence at all, for example, that the Solutreans had boats. Although similar in some respects, in detail, the Clovis point technology is found nowhere else in the world, and yet it is commonly found throughout the Americas after about 13,000 years ago. It is most likely that the Americans who developed this highly efficient hunting technology displaced or merged with their antecedents whoever they were.