Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 8, 2017 15:42:35 GMT
It's been one of the most contentious debates in anthropology, and now scientists are saying it's pretty much over. A group of prominent anthropologists have done an overview of the scientific literature and declare in Science magazine that the "Clovis first" hypothesis of the peopling of the Americas is dead. For decades, students were taught that the first people in the Americas were a group called the Clovis who walked over the Bering land bridge about 13,500 years ago. They arrived (so the narrative goes) via an ice-free corridor between glaciers in North America. But evidence has been piling up since the 1980s of human campsites in North and South America that date back much earlier than 13,500 years. At sites ranging from Oregon in the US to Monte Verde in Chile, evidence of human habitation goes back as far as 18,000 years. Much more including map here
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Tix Mascot
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Post by Tix Mascot on Nov 8, 2017 23:46:58 GMT
the "Clovis first" hypothesis of the peopling of the Americas is dead. About time! It's strange how mainstream opinions have a nasty tendency to be defended by all possible means, even long after they have been disproved, as if its a matter of life and death to their supporters instead of accepting alternative hypotheses that are more plausible. The population of America must have happened over a long time, maybe tens of thousands of years and not only from west, but also from Europe and Africa. That a small group of primitive gatherers-hunters crossed the Beringia landbridge, then scattered all over the continent, while some families spent 1000 years to reach Chile is absurd, IMO. Much more realistic is a gradual arrival by boat to several points along the coast.
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Joey
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Post by Joey on Nov 9, 2017 3:47:26 GMT
I always found it interesting how America was discovered. If you really wanted to know they should have asked the Native Americans how they got here. Naturally that only takes us back a 1500 to 1600 hundred years ago. Guess it would be nice to have blood samples and run DNA on them and maybe trace them back that way. Are the from Asia? Europe? Africa? Hawaii...no wait nobody would leave paradise.
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