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To: muawiyah

Do you have a good link for the Seymour mounds? I Googled, but couldn't find much.


14 posted on 08/22/2005 11:55:24 AM PDT by Choose Ye This Day (I lost my copy of the PNAC Neo-Con agenda. Can someone fax me one?)
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To: Choose Ye This Day

I know what you mean. I googled and only found Seymour Butts.


15 posted on 08/22/2005 12:09:52 PM PDT by sine_nomine (Protect the weakest of the weak - the unborn babies.)
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To: Choose Ye This Day
I don’t know Indiana geography well enough to tell if THIS is what you’re talking about. The artist’s conception certainly seems similar to the pyramids at Caral – and at a huge number of other sites in South, Central and North America.

There seems to be a straight line heritage of Amerind pyramid architecture from Caral to Olmec sites like La Venta, Mexico; the Zapotec at Monte Alban; the predecessors of the Inca at Teotihuacan; the Maya, the Moche of Peru; and many others like the many later mounds and pyramids to be found along the course of the Mississippi River and tributaries.

There’s a site HERE that lists many more including the largest in the U.S. at Cahokia, IL, a huge one in Mississippi and others. The analogy between the Nile and its floods with Mississippi floods and replenishment of fertile topsoil is interesting. There doesn’t appear to be any shortage of mounds, monumental constructions and pyramids in the Americas!

20 posted on 08/22/2005 12:41:05 PM PDT by Bernard Marx (Don't make the mistake of interpreting my Civility as Servility)
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To: Choose Ye This Day
I don't believe there is anything at all on the net. There is, however, some pamphlets concerning the matter in public libraries in Indiana, and the IU or Purdue main libraries probably have several doctoral theses on them.

This is at the Northern edge of one of the Western Hemisphere's primary agricultural development areas ~ all the different kinds of Sunflower and Squash plants were domesticated here in ancient times by the earliest settled Indians ~ that's long before the Adena and Hopewell cultures, and about coincident with the Peruvians.

Squash are, of course, a subtropical plant so the original seeds were brought North to this area by Indians who lived far down on the Gulf Coast, or maybe even South America. Someone may have a date on the introduction of corn in this region, and that would be AFTER the arrival of what may have been a colony of Andean Indians.

30 posted on 08/22/2005 3:22:45 PM PDT by muawiyah (/ hey coach do I gotta' put in that "/sarcasm " thing again?)
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