Research Focus
My research investigates critical questions about human prehistory that challenge conventional archaeological and paleoanthropological models. Working independently allows me to pursue evidence-based inquiry without the constraints of institutional orthodoxy.
Current Research Areas
Pre-Clovis Human Presence in the Americas
The Clovis-first model has dominated American archaeology for decades, but accumulating evidence suggests human presence in the Americas far earlier than 13,000 years ago. My research examines anomalous dating results from sites across North and South America, including:
- Monte Verde, Chile: Evidence of occupation dating to 14,800 years ago
- Pedra Furada, Brazil: Controversial dates extending beyond 20,000 years
- Cerutti Mastodon site, California: Possible human activity 130,000 years ago
- White Sands, New Mexico: Footprints dated to 23,000 years ago
Each of these sites presents challenges to established migration timelines. Rather than dismissing inconvenient evidence, we must rigorously evaluate all data and revise our models accordingly.
Anomalous Radiometric Dating Results
When dating results contradict accepted timelines, mainstream archaeology often dismisses them as contamination or methodological error. However, patterns of anomalous dates across multiple sites and dating methods suggest our understanding of early human migration may be fundamentally flawed.
My work critically examines radiometric dating methodologies and their limitations, while also investigating why certain anomalous results are systematically excluded from published literature.
Early Human Species Dispersal
The conventional narrative of human evolution depicts a linear progression from Africa to the rest of the world. However, emerging evidence suggests multiple waves of migration by different human species, including:
- Evidence of pre-Sapiens hominins outside Africa earlier than currently acknowledged
- Genetic evidence of unknown hominin admixture in modern human populations
- Morphological anomalies in ancient remains that don't fit established taxonomies
- Patterns suggesting multiple dispersal events rather than a single "Out of Africa" migration
Cross-Cultural Archaeological Parallels
Striking similarities exist between geographically distant ancient sites—similar construction techniques, architectural layouts, and symbolic systems appearing in cultures with no known contact. While mainstream archaeology attributes these to independent invention or coincidence, the patterns warrant deeper investigation.
I examine evidence suggesting possible prehistoric contact between ancient civilizations, or alternatively, the existence of an earlier common cultural source.
Methodological Approach
My research methodology combines:
- Rigorous data analysis: Applying standard scientific methods to all evidence, including anomalous findings
- Critical evaluation of assumptions: Questioning the premises underlying orthodox interpretations
- Multi-disciplinary integration: Drawing on geology, genetics, linguistics, and other fields
- Open-minded skepticism: Neither dismissing nor uncritically accepting controversial claims
Recent Projects
In 2024, I was invited to participate in an Antarctic research project applying paleoanthropological analysis methods in extreme environments. While confidentiality agreements limit what I can share publicly, this work represents an exciting expansion of human origins research into previously unexplored contexts.
For research collaboration inquiries, please visit my contact page.