1 posted on
03/06/2011 12:45:44 PM PST by
blam
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To: SunkenCiv; shamusotoole
Thanks to FReeper Shamusotoole for this article above.
Tracing The Genes
MitochondrialDNA (mtDNA) haplogroup testing led to the surprising hypothesis that some of the first Americans came from Europe thousands of years ago.
2 posted on
03/06/2011 12:49:35 PM PST by
blam
To: blam
Fascinating! We are ALL related. LOL The Scots-Irish had Viking/Norse ancestors as well.
3 posted on
03/06/2011 12:50:03 PM PST by
madison10
To: blam
thanks for posting. very interesting
To: blam
Fascinating. Thanks for the interesting post.
5 posted on
03/06/2011 1:01:57 PM PST by
Huck
(Mrs. Palin = Christine O'Donnell)
To: blam
Maybe how the blue eye gene came to be in Native Americans?
7 posted on
03/06/2011 1:09:29 PM PST by
Rebelbase
To: blam
Very interesting ! Thanks.
To: blam
Those are names said to be Algonquin, with Michigan meaning middle sea basin and Milwaukee meaning good, beautiful land. Wisconsin must be Algonquin/Old Norse for "land of no wampum"...
10 posted on
03/06/2011 1:17:02 PM PST by
mikrofon
(Norse by Norse-West)
To: blam
Our efforts to decipher the Walam Olum have found a striking correlation of the Walam Olum words to Old Norse phrases Additional evidence supporting this theory was found in a recently translated Walam Olum text which read, in part, "What's in your wallet?"
To: blam
Wonder how The Orthodoxy in science are taking this?
13 posted on
03/06/2011 1:19:31 PM PST by
Darksheare
(Dear Interdimensional Monstrosity, I fear our relationship has taken a turn for the worse...)
To: blam
Michigan and Milwaukee are two examples from his books. Those are names said to be Algonquin, with Michigan meaning middle sea basin and Milwaukee meaning good, beautiful land.
In Old Norse, midh means middle, or lying in the middle: and sjoe-kum or sjoe-kumme means sea basin or sea reservoir.
Lake Michigan lies midway between Lake Huron and Lake Superior, hence the translation would be correct, Sherwin wrote.
I think this was a bit garbled. It makes more sense to say that Michigan is the land between Lake Huron and Lake Michigan so that the translation of land "lying in the middle" of "sea basins" would be correct.
18 posted on
03/06/2011 1:28:39 PM PST by
aruanan
To: blam
I have to wonder:
If the Norse movement into North America was significant enough to have the effect on language the article indicates it had, why did it not have a more visible effect in other areas, for instance metal working.
The Norse of the time knew how to work metal, so why were the Amerinds still using flint hundreds of years later?
23 posted on
03/06/2011 1:52:54 PM PST by
KrisKrinkle
(Blessed be those who know the depth and breadth of their ignorance. Cursed be those who don't.)
To: blam
“Two experts on ancient America may have solved not only the mysterious disappearance of Norse from the Western Settlement of Greenland in the 1300s,”
I think the politically incorrect version of why the Norse settlers disappeared was that they were eaten by eskimos.
To: blam
I gasp when thinking about the horrible discrimination these refugees of Global Cooling must have faced. What kind of reparations are due from the Indigenous Peoples? Surely trillions given 600 years of compound interest. If it makes a difference in the life of one child it will all be worth it.
To: blam
This story would be excellent inspiration for a really strange Halloween costume.
26 posted on
03/06/2011 2:08:18 PM PST by
Dr. Sheldon Cooper
(I am one lab accident away from being a super-villian.)
To: blam
aa is pronounced as something between the a in war and the o in horse.
There is no between, the way I pronounce war and horse.
To: blam; shamusotoole; Elsie
Tak altså mange! Udmærket nyheder. Hvad synes i om Wisconsin? Var der hvilken som helst lamaniter? Hvem var den Høj Cumorah folk?
33 posted on
03/06/2011 4:22:51 PM PST by
Utah Binger
(Southern Utah where the Inman FReepers Meet July 23 Pray Jim Rob Can Make It)
To: blam
The Norse who settled Iceland had been living in the Hebrides and Ireland before that, at least some of them, and brought along Celtic slave-women to Iceland.
So the Algonquian word "tomahawk" may actually honor its inventor,one Irish-Norseman, Tom O'Hawk.
Seriously, there is no reason that the surviving Norse accounts of the trips to North America must be the whole story--there could have been other voyages and other settlements that were forgotten. But it is a long way from the confirmed Norse settlement at the northern end of Newfoundland to the Great Lakes or other Algonquian areas. (A medieval Norwegian coin turned up in an archaeological dig in Maine--but I don't know if that means some Norse got to Maine, or whether the Indians in Maine got the coin through trade with other tribes.)
To: blam
Interesting, thanks. Anyone found the Templar fleet yet?
41 posted on
03/06/2011 6:26:42 PM PST by
americanophile
("this absurd theology of an immoral Bedouin, is a rotting corpse which poisons our lives"-Ataturk)
To: blam
45 posted on
03/06/2011 7:23:27 PM PST by
csvset
To: Claud
49 posted on
03/06/2011 8:09:34 PM PST by
Antoninus
(Fight the homosexual agenda. Support marriage -- www.nationformarriage.org)
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