Posted on 07/01/2008 10:26:26 AM PDT by blam
The early Europeans “sailed” here in small boats that hugged the then-huge glacial shelf that ran from Portugal and Spain to Canada, with stops along the way at the islands in between. They never went to sea, but the boats allowed rapid travel following game. Their arrival in northern North America was thousands of land miles from Mexico and Central America, a distance that would have taken thousands of years to migrate over through rough terrain and obstacles. The finding of Clovis Points that mirror Solutrian Points from Spain cannot be a coincidence.
Well, in 10,000 BC there were no “Europeans” — those people would be just a few centuries off from when East-Asians like the Altaics/Mongoloids would have split off from the Caucasians.
Note: this topic is from 07/01/2008. Thanks blam.
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As I read this post I started to think about earlier posts on the Carolina Bays. My theory on them was that huge blocks of ice had been thrown that far from the boloid strikes in Lake Michigan and then melted. I think that the researchers in this article should consider the possibilit of boloid strikes in Lake Michigan causing their phenomena. I tried to find some pictures that might be similar to the Carolina Bays. Instead I found this link. If you look at the topographic map (third one down), it looks to me as if a great quantity of water was sloshed out of the southern tip of Lake Michigan, leaving a ridge of elevated land as the waters receded. Time to post the Firestone book again.
http://il.water.usgs.gov/nawqa/uirb/description/geology.html
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Good idea:
The Cycle of Cosmic Catastrophes:
Flood, Fire, and Famine
in the History of Civilization
by Richard Firestone,
Allen West, and
Simon Warwick-Smith
Mmmmmaybe on the splash, but OTOH, the muck farms west and south of here were formerly lakebeds, and the Kalamazoo River, which flows into the Lake at Saugatuck, carried glacial meltwater along the base of the icepack, draining the entire area now drained by the Grand River as well as the K-zoo basin. The river that now flows east and through Chicago (apart from the very end, because Chicago built a sewage treatment system that swallows the outflow of the river and makes the Lake flow inward, up the riverbed, as well) used to flow west and into the glacial-era Mississippi.
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