Posted on 06/26/2007 2:32:13 PM PDT by blam
That’s so cool! (or hot?)
I’ve spent many a cold night laying on a floor heated by ondol. You had to leave a window open a crack or risk dying of carbon monoxide poisoning.
ping
Ondol is one of the things I miss about South Korea. I never had to worry about putting my bare feet on a cold floor if I had to go to the bathroom in the middle of the night!
Now that they've demonstrated Uralic-Altaic speakers were present in North America, it's a simple matter to show how they got to Southern Indiana.
These guys?
When I lived in that part of the world, ondol heating was traditional in Korea but so lethal that US troops were forbidden from sleeping in any area heated in this way. I wonder if the tribe in this Alaskan study was wiped ot by carbon monoxide poisoning.
If you heat with Ondol does your house smell like Kimchi?
He usually has a couple of them underway.
That's why Koreans speak an Uralic-Altaic language, just like the Tibetans, the Mongols, the Estonians, the Hungarians, and a host of other people with some serious cultural, linguistic, agricultural and political contact with North Central Eur-Asia.
I've been trying to get the archaeologists at Indiana University interested in the Brown County stones. Now I will approach the folks who teach Uralic-Altaic languages to see if they can get interested in doing something to preserve these stones.
Several of them were painted and carved on in the early 1800s by folks who thought of them as good road/direction signs.
ping.
Maybe the migration went the other way, from America to Asia. That would blow alot of theories away.
Kathy get in here
OMGGG ROFL
Alaska ping.
Identifiable Koreans were in the Korean peninsula for a very long time. It's one of the places where civilization started ~
I think this is the first time anyone has ever pinned down the presence of people from any Old World civilization in the Americas before Leif Erickson.
This will make it easier in the future for archaeologists to gain acceptance of lesser sorts of evience (amulets, bead works, preserved leather goods, clay pots) as being as legitimately present in America as they seem to be.
I believe that there have always been people on this continent. The notion that everyone came from somewhere else is ethnocentric and simplistic.
There was that volcano that went off and killed almost everybody ~ ran the population down to a few thousand at most. Then, sometime halfway through the period of maximum glaciation, someone invented boats.
Hasn't been the same since.
Nothing is stagnant.
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