My thanks go out to thouworm, MtnClimber, colorado tanker,Textide, and Jamestown1630 for their kind remarks here:Vanity Question: Best Current FR Ping Lists [03/24/2022]
Related:What Were Humans Doing in the Yukon 24,000 Years Ago?
Scientists have examined remains from caves
and think the shelters served as temporary camps
for hunters who targeted horses
Devon Bidal, Hakai | March 14, 2022 | Smithsonian mag
I never supposed that humans came here by only one route, and I suspect, as more artifacts are uncovered (who says “global warming” is necessarily a bad thing?) we’ll learn our knowledge about human migration was/is totally lacking in imagination.
Jus’ sayin’
‘Face
;o]
I wonder how much the comment in post #23 will affect my ESG score?
The inland route never made any sense to me.
There’s this huge continent-wide ice sheet, maybe a mile or so thick across the upper half of North America, but there’s this nice, nifty, totally convenient for the narrative, ice-free passage for people and critters to get from Asia to North America?
And this nifty, totally convenient to the narrative gap in the massive ice walls, is itself bordered by massive ice walls, but vegetation grows thick and healthy enough to support the passage of migrating herds over thousands of miles, and it’s those herds that the “first” humans come to North America?
Uh huh.
Cool story, bro.