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Note from Xiuhcoatl of Aztlan Rising: So the American
Association for the Advancement of Science is claiming that Europeans
were here first...as if that would change anything. Tools are tools.
All of Earth's people made them and all are similar in some ways. They
support their claims by pointing out that the "land bridge" in the
Bering Strait could not be passed during the time period that the
Clovis points appeared. But instead of using this to disprove this
unsupported theory of migration, they choose to boost their European
egos with even more outrageous claims about the pre-"mongoloid" arrival
of their ancestors. Even if they had arrived before Native Americans
this does not make them indigenous to this land and it does not change
what has already occured, the invasion and occupation of
Europeans in Ixachilan. They are still immigrants to this land and will
always be. Why not use this information to bring down the Bering Strait
theory, which has no credibility? Because it does not benefit them. It
doesn't matter whether Indians migrated here 13,000, 17,000, or 50,000
years ago, or if they were always here. They were here, well-situated, and the only people on this land
at the time of the European arrival, and that makes the indigenous
Americans the true "owners" of these lands. All the lies in the world
won't change that.
First Americans May Have Been EuropeanBjorn Carey LiveScience Staff Writer LiveScience.com Sun Feb 19, 9:00 PM ETST. LOUIS—The first humans to spread across North America may have been seal hunters from France and Spain. This
runs counter to the long-held belief that the first human entry into
the Americas was a crossing of a land-ice bridge that spanned the
Bering Strait about 13,500 years ago.
The new thinking was outlined here Sunday at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
The tools don’t match
Recent studies have
suggested that the glaciers that helped form the bridge connecting
Siberia and Alaska began receding around 17,000 to 13,000 years ago,
leaving very little chance that people walked from one continent to the
other.
Also, when archaeologist Dennis Stanford of
the Smithsonian Institution places American
spearheads, called Clovis points, side-by-side with Siberian points, he
sees a divergence of many characteristics.
Instead,
Stanford said today, Clovis points match up much closer with Solutrean
style tools, which researchers date to about 19,000 years ago. This
suggests that the American people making Clovis points made Solutrean
points before that.
There’s just one problem with
this hypothesis—Solutrean toolmakers lived in France and Spain.
Scientists know of no land-ice bridge that spanned that entire gap.
The lost hunting party
Stanford
has an idea for how humans crossed the Atlantic, though—boats. Art from
that era indicates that Solutrean populations in northern Spain were
hunting marine animals, such as seals, walrus, and tuna.
They
may have even made their way into the floating ice chunks that unite
immense harp seal populations in Canada and Europe each year. Four
million seals, Stanford said, would look like a pretty good meal to
hungry European hunters, who might have ventured into the ice flows
much the same way that the Inuit in Alaska and Greenland do today.
Inuit
use large, open hunting boats constructed from animal skins for longer
trips or big hunts. These boats, called umiaq, can hold a dozen adults,
as well as several children, dead seals or walruses, and even dog-sled
teams. Inuit have been building these boats for thousands of years, and
Stanford believes that Solutrean people may have used a similar design.
It’s
possible that some groups of these hunters ventured out as far as
Iceland, where they may have gotten caught up in the prevailing
currents and were carried to North America.
“You get
three boats loaded up like this and you would have a viable
population,” Stanford said. “You could actually get a whole bunch of
people washing up on Nova Scotia.”
Some scientists
believe that the Solutrean peoples were responsible for much of the
cave art in Europe. Opponents of Stanford’s work ask why, then, would
these people stop producing art once they made it to North America?
“I
don’t know,” Stanford said. “But you’re looking at a long distance
inland, 100 miles or so, before they would get to caves to do art in.”
- Ancient People Followed 'Kelp Highway' to America, Researcher Says
- North America Settled by Just 70 People, Study Concludes
- Possible Fire Pit Dated to Be Over 50,000 Years Old
- Early Man Was Hunted by Birds
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