• Indigenous arrival 130,000 years ago

    From David Dalton@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jun 22 04:52:57 2023
    XPost: alt.native, soc.culture.native, alt.culture.inuit
    XPost: sci.archaeology, alt.atheism

    June 21’s CBC Radio One Ideas program may be of interest.

    Here are the details:

    Title: Indigenous archaeologist agues humans may have
    arrived here 130,000 years ago.

    Abstract: The dominant story in archaeology has long been
    that humans came to North America around 12,000 years
    ago. But indigenous archaeologist Paulette Steeves points
    to mounting evidence suggesting human migration may
    have occurred closer to 130,000 years ago.

    Link to article, which contains a button to play the 54 minute
    radio programme: https://tinyurl.com/p4hzr4s9 .

    --
    https://www.nfld.com/~dalton/dtales.html Salmon on the Thorns (mystic page) "This could be the final breath; This is life and death;
    This is hard rock and water; Out here between wind and flame;
    Between tears and elation; Lies a secret nation" (Ron Hynes)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Kerr-Mudd, John@21:1/5 to David Dalton on Thu Jun 22 12:38:03 2023
    XPost: alt.native, soc.culture.native, alt.culture.inuit
    XPost: sci.archaeology, alt.atheism

    On Thu, 22 Jun 2023 04:52:57 -0230
    David Dalton <dalton@nfld.com> wrote:

    June 21’s CBC Radio One Ideas program may be of interest.

    Here are the details:

    Title: Indigenous archaeologist agues humans may have
    arrived here 130,000 years ago.

    Abstract: The dominant story in archaeology has long been
    that humans came to North America around 12,000 years
    ago. But indigenous archaeologist Paulette Steeves points
    to mounting evidence suggesting human migration may
    have occurred closer to 130,000 years ago.

    Link to article, which contains a button to play the 54 minute
    radio programme: https://tinyurl.com/p4hzr4s9 .

    --
    https://www.nfld.com/~dalton/dtales.html Salmon on the Thorns (mystic page) "This could be the final breath; This is life and death;
    This is hard rock and water; Out here between wind and flame;
    Between tears and elation; Lies a secret nation" (Ron Hynes)

    She uses "Indigenous ways and methods"

    https://vancouversun.com/news/national/aboriginal-anthropologist
    <quote>
    Indigenous ways and methods don’t exclude Western science, says Steeves.
    They add to it. “It’s about re-linking our communities to these ancient sites and times. It challenges the status quo and places our people in
    deep time, on par with other areas in the old world.”
    </quote>

    --
    Bah, and indeed Humbug.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)