To: blam
It also serves as a warning for the scale of impact that climate change can cause, says Professor Gaffney. Human communities would have lost their homelands as the rising water began to encroach upon the wide, low-lying plains. These must be the people who invented "moving to where the water ain't."
Somehow, I think we'll find a way to rediscover their invention as we, and our children's children's children, face the eternal changes in weather.
7 posted on
04/23/2007 2:38:15 PM PDT by
dead
(I've got my eye out for Mullah Omar.)
To: dead
These must be the people who invented "moving to where the water ain't."The people down in New Orleans are still struggling with the concept.
36 posted on
04/23/2007 4:23:49 PM PDT by
2111USMC
To: dead
Human communities would have lost their homelands as the rising water began to encroach upon the wide, low-lying plains. They were hunter gatherers. They arrive in an area, hunt and gather until there isn't much to hunt and gather any more, then move on. Over a scale of hundreds or thousands of years, they would not have noticed the rising water
41 posted on
04/23/2007 6:49:10 PM PDT by
SauronOfMordor
(<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ymLJz3N8ayI">Open Season</a> rocks)
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