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ake it we can begin building upon our timelines we have now provided. And you will understand then why I then regard some things AFTER this Flood (snipped the rest, of which I have seemingly failed to make my point) I dont believe in the Flood, I dont believe in Noah, I dont believe you have any sources, in fact I KNOW you dont have any sources, and frankly I have enough stress in my life than to spend time arguing with someone who does not possess logic, coherence and manners, let alone mental stability in order to have a conversation that has any worth whatsoever. You may believe that you have won, that is your right, I on the other hand feel that I have failed to make any headway with someone who is in need of intense psychological counseling. I feel very sorry for anyone who bases their life around the data that you present at face value. Its not scholarship, its mindless adherence to fear based dogma, and to that I will not be a party. I bid you peace, this matter is now irrevocably closed. We will have no further contact on the basis that you resort to discourteous behavior and bigotry. If you were a biblcal scholar worthy of any merit whatsoever, you would not insist on forcing your religious views onto others. Maybe now I will go outside and scream at my limestone wall in my garden, it cant have had any less effect than I have here. Ankh Udja Seneb! XinaReturn to Top
On 17 Nov 1996 02:57:16 GMT, sudsm@aol.com wrote: >...................................There followed a long >migration east until the nation found and settled in the mountain- >surrounded plateau we call the Tarim Basin............ >Its homeland plateau thus came to be called "the face of the earth". >.........So, while I agree that it is pointless to look for the ark, >especially outside the so-called "face of the earth" (approx. Long. 95 >to 105, Lat. 44 to 54)..................... hmmm......seems that your coordinates would place the "face of the earth" on the wrong side of the altai mountains, and well into the mongolian highlands...northeast of the tarim basin (approx. long. 75 to 95. lat. 37 to 42)...... frankReturn to Top
On 16 Nov 1996 18:03:07 GMT, rg10003@cus.cam.ac.uk (R. Gaenssmantel) wrote: >C14 could theoretically be also formed by adding a neutron to C13, but since >the half life time of a neutron is only 10.6 minutes (we are about 15 minutes >light travel away from the sun) and the scattering crossection is comparatively >high (with air) I would not expect to find any neutrons penetrating the >atmosphere. light from the sun reaches the earth in about 8 minutes...the half life of a neutron is closer to 12 minutes... frankReturn to Top
Dear John, Welcome to this discussion. I'm sure you will find that many people here already made up their minds about these issues, and have strong feelings pro or con that they don't hesitate to express. Perhaps you could provide for us a summary of what you said in your article? Thanks, Yuri. fcattus@aol.com wrote: : PLEASE see Betsy Hill's artic le in Nawpa Pacha, ca. 1972, and related : pubs by other Columbia investigators, Don Lathrap, etc! Some are cited im : my Amer Anthro article on Diffusionism and biological analogy in : 1979....... The Jomon-like pottery is interesting---but it evolves out : of earlier local styles in situ!!! : --John R. Cole : (now at fcattus@aol.com) -- ** Yuri Kuchinsky in Toronto ** -- a webpage like any other... http://www.io.org/~yuku -- Most of the evils of life arise from man's being unable to sit still in a room || B. PascalReturn to Top
47c00$69c4b7c7@tekdiver> Organization: Internex Online (shell.io.org), Toronto, Ontario, Canada Distribution: Paul E. Pettennude (tekdiver@ix.netcom.com) posted a message from another scholar: ... : 4. a point of correction: the US News & WR article claims that : Chen : is the foremost authority of only about 12 scholars worldwide who are : trained in ancient script (podunck Lehigh Univ. has two!). A point of correction to correct the previous point of correction: The article actually says that there are "only about a dozen _experts_ worldwide in the Shang script". It doesn't say that there are "12 scholars worldwide who are trained in ancient script". : First, Chen is : a : very minor scholar. I rather doubt this. Why then did Prof. Mike Xu of the University of Central Oklahoma travel to Beijing to ask for his opinion? Chen actually didn't want to get involved at first... Yuri. -- ** Yuri Kuchinsky in Toronto ** -- a webpage like any other... http://www.io.org/~yuku -- Most of the evils of life arise from man's being unable to sit still in a room || B. PascalReturn to Top
In article <328D8EB2.629C@wi.net> elijah@wi.net "Eliyehowah" writes: >I take it we can begin building upon our timelines we have now provided. I take it that you've never even *heard* of Occam's Razor? Or is it just that you didn't like it enough to buy that concept? >And you will understand then why I then regard some things AFTER this Flood >that by numeric year you would view as BEFORE my year for the Flood. The mythical flood of Noah, or your more recent flood of drivel? >I do not consider the Flood quite yet a debate in our topic but rather C-14. >Debating whether C-14 is in error or not, and WHERE is it in error. >If you know C-14, you will know we both (science/religion) believe it to be >in error. If you knew about C-14, you'd know *why* there is a standard error and also how that error is corrected; it's patently obvious that you don't know, and also that you don't much care. >However, you will NOW see how I can scrutinize and criticise my own work... I'll bet that you don't guffaw as much as nearly everyone else does... >The chart --appears-- to match MY chronology perfectly with no adjustment. Which is only as it should be, for you'd devised the chart in the first place. >from the C-14 convention of your scientists cannot proudly be claimed by me >as perfectly matching my work. [Simply, my Egypt doesnt begin in 2370 BC >when Noah walked off the ark. And so C-14 Egyptian dates which proudly >support 2370 BC (not 3000 BC) cannot be used by me to produce a 2370 BC Egypt. >This means that the C-14 results which God supplies speaks equally to me >as it does you to come up with an explanation. Uh-oh. Time to take your tablets again, Elly? o-) -- < Paul >Return to Top
In articleReturn to Top, petrich@netcom.com says... > >In article <56e16h$5d2@fridge-nf0.shore.net>, >Steve Whittet wrote: > >>I think you are missing the point Ben. If hunter-gathering and nomadic >>pastoralist groups were perfectly proficient in language, language >>would not evolve. ... > > Irrelevant; there is an abundance of evidence of evolution of >historically-attested languages -- and often evolution in fields that >show no need for evolution, such as phonology, grammar, basic vocabulary, ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ >etc. You don't think language evolves. Are you a creationist? > >... Chimpanzees can be >>taught to form sentences even though their mouths and vocal cords are >>not suited for speech using sign language. Their sentences often use >>pivot words just as is the case with children. > > However, there's been a lot of controversy over simian linguistic >abilities; it's not clear that chimps are able to construct coherent >sentences, even with sign language. Not since the mid sixties when Washoe began to construct coherent complex sentences, or aren't you familiar with the work of Allen and Beatrice Gardiner? I don't know how many times the experiment has been replicated since then but to label it contraversial is simply uninformed. > >>Perhaps you are confusing speech with language. People have had the >>ability to speak for about the last 200,000 years and may have had >>several hundred different vocalizations or calls ranging from >>grunts and growls to whoops, howls, screeches, screams, barks, >>whines, chortles, groans, whimpers, oohs, and aahs to whistles. > > Very cute. I'm sure that you can make all these sounds on >command, Mr. Whittet. However, why isn't there *any* human society, even >in the most isolated parts of the world, which have only those >aforementioned sounds as their means of communication? There are a lot of things everyone used to do 200,000 years ago which most people today don't do. As I have repeated ceaselessly, language tends to evolve as people do. Are you claiming there are some isolated human societies who have survived 200,000 years to be with us today representing lines of development which have not evolved at all in all that time? > >>>It's not for nothing you've been compared to a squid. An apt comparison, >>>in my experience. >>Generally it has been my experience that people who have the facts to >>make a case need not resort to recycling used invective. > > Just more proof of how well my comparison to a squid holds up; >Mr. Whittet (metaphorically) squirts ink to cloud an issue when he sees >that he's about to lose. > >>>I can't imagine why you think a major adaptation like language, with >>>serious associated neurological apparatus, should have only appeared in >>>the last 6,000 years, and then spread without a single exception to every >>>group world-wide in such a short period of time. (Or, presumably, much >>>more recently, since urbanization in most of the world is a very recent >>>phenomenon.) > >>I am measuring it as an exponential curve. ... > > And what is your motivation for an exponential curve, Mr. Whittet? Let me put aside your interesting selection of the word motivation as the object of your question and provide you my reason for using an exponential curve to measure the growth of language. Language has evolved over a period of 200,000 years. Very slowly at first but with the rate of change changing at an increasing rate, in very recent times very rapidly. Generally when you observe a phenomena where the rate of change changes at an increasing rate you may describe this as an exponential curve. When this curve is compared with increases in population, urbanization or indeed any observable sociological trend you care to name, there is very close congruence. This is what connects the evolution of language to the process of civilization and the growth of cities. >-- >Loren Petrich steve
Stella Nemeth wrote: > > Mike WrightReturn to Topwrote: > > >.... If I have a larger vocabulary than you > >do, is my English more sophisticated than yours? > > Generally the answer to that question is yes. The more educated and > the more sophisticated you are, the more likely you are to have a > large vocabulary. The less educated and the less sophisticated you > are, the more likely you ae to have a small vocabulary. Is this evaluation based on anything other that an assumption? Do you have any sources for studies? > Think about it for a minute. If the size of your personal vocabulary > didn't mean something, why did they test you on vocabulary and word > usage before they let you go to college, or for that matter in some > states before they let you go to high school. The question is not whether my personal vocabulary "means something", but whether or not it is a valid measure of something called the "sophistication" of my language. School entrance exams test for vocabulary that will be useful in the context of receiving training at that particular school. The vocabulary required to qualify for entrance into an advanced music institute might be quite different from the test for advanced computer engineering. Which has the more sophisticated requirements? A language training facility or one that trains gymnasts might require only aptitude tests, because vocabulary is not particularly important to either endeavor. > The idea that languages with large vocabularies are more sophisticated > than languages with small vocabularies isn't a new one. > > And yes, you count the 40 words for snow or the 50 camel handling > jargon words in the word count. The people who have 40 words for snow > probably don't have as many scientific terms as 18th Century English > had. And certainly 20th Century English has move scientific terms > than the language of two centuries ago. So, are you saying having many words for different kinds of snow (BTW, this is apparently an unsubstantiated legend) or camel handling is less "sophisticated" than having many words related to science and technology? Let's carry it a bit farther, then. Suppose your vocabulary and mine happen to contain exactly the same number of "words", but my vocabulary has more words related to farm animals and crops, and yours has more words related to linguistics. Whose language is more sophisticated? What if the topics are music and physics? How about chemistry vs. electronics? Or, kinship terms vs. nautical terms? What if your vocabulary is twice as large as mine, but contains no words relating to modern science? What is the objective method of measuring degrees of "sophistication"? What are the criteria? Has anyone ever actually applied these methods in comparing existing languages? -- Mike Wright ____________________________________ email: darwin@scruznet.com WWW: http://www.scruz.net/~darwin/language.html
Posted and e-mailed (though not to the previous poster). Indology listowner: While one of my main reasons for joining the list is in fact the hope of finding archaeologists there, I've only just joined, and hesitate as yet to post this there. My apologies for adding to your burdens, but please forward this to the list if it's in fact appropriate, or if you prefer, forward a pointer to let archaeologists know this topic is under discussion on Usenet newsgroup sci.archaeology. In article <56lmr8$b1p@reaper.uunet.ca>, sshankar@waterloo.border.com wrote: >Miguel Carrasquer Vidal wrote: >> >> Indo-Iranians from Central Asia came into Iran and India somewhere in >> the 2nd millennium. Given that Indo-Iranian is closely connected to >> languages in Europe (Greek especially), their ultimate origin must be >> (Eastern) Europe. (Just before we get any further... I'm not current on I-E origins stuff, but hadn't understood it to be *quite* that simple!) > Do you know of any archeaological evidence for the "movement of >Indo-Iranians into Iran & India" ?? > Recent studies seem to question the validity of the "IE movement into > India" theories. I've yet to see such studies unconnected to places with names like "Vedic Research Institute"; in particular, I've seen a spectacularly unconvincing paper by one David Frawley (presumably still findable on the Web, where I first saw it). (Also, in the distant past, various articles assuming or claiming to support theReturn to Topchronology appeared in the .) I will appreciate any better references you can provide. The rest of this post proceeds on what I know, which unfortunately derives from a lot of careful study years ago, plus rather less, and less careful, recent reading. There are lots of disagreements over how *many* Indo-European speakers arrived in India, in particular (or South Asia more generally: in this post, I'm awake as to which I use, thanks), or about *how* these speakers arrived. Some months ago, Moin Ansari and I debated these issues at some length on this newsgroup, and I'm cc'ing him on this post partly to let him know the topic's back. But there is very little doubt that such people *did* arrive in India, and around the time Mr. Carrasquer Vidal says (though maybe the 3rd millennium BC is a possibility). Several lines of evidence converge on this, and there doesn't seem to be a lot of room left for disagreement. When I last studied the subject in detail (1986-7), the main arguments that held water were still the 19th-century linguistic and textual ones (e.g., the similarity between Avestan Persian and Vedic Sanskrit, or the tendency for the older texts to use further-west place names). While these were good enough to persuade me the movement happened, I wasn't terribly confident about much more than that. (Mr. Ansari, by the way, disagrees strenuously with me on the validity of the other older arguments, but he can make his own case.) Recent evidence appears to make it much clearer. First of all, Asko Parpola's belief that the Indus Valley Civilisation's language was a Dravidian language is now persuading quite a few people who had been skeptical; I understand he's close to a translation of the seals. (Mr. Ansari's references are much likelier to be current than mine, here.) Much the most plausible way to explain the subsequent disappearance of Dravidian languages from that area is by positing a migration from the northwest, not one from the southeast. Second, there's evidence for that migration. See the interim site report on Harappa, in particular (Meadow 1991 below). In the chapter which John Lukacs worked on, there is an unequivocal assertion of significant population changes in the centuries prior to 800 B.C. The people who worked on this chapter have my respect, and their methods are as carefully scientific as I can imagine a way to be; I haven't had the opportunity to read it yet, but I'm inclined (reluctantly, I might add) to assume they're correct. In addition (somewhat older argument here, but germane), there's more general "touchy-feely" evidence of the pottery-styles sort of some sort of migration southeast. Notable stylistic traits in pottery show this direction of diffusion. I'm thinking in particular of the appearance of fine grey wares. It's also worth considering Pirak Damb (Jarrige 1979), where there are clear Central Asian affinities in the post-Harappan population's material culture. Some summary of the "grey ware - Sanskrit" equation may be found in Gaur 1983 (though this has to be read with care, as Gaur was not entirely free to speak his mind there). I'm not sure what else goes into the shift in opinion. Ten years ago, there was a general sense in South Asian archaeology of an opening, a sense that much of the standing interpretation of that archaeology was simply wrong and needed revising. One of the things that grew out of that was, of course, the opening for claims (e.g.) that Sanskrit (or for that matter the human race) originated in India. But there was also a lot of work being done trying to replace the flawed conclusions of the past with better ones. Unfortunately, my brief opportunity to watch that work happen ended; in the past eight years, I haven't even found a library where I can read . I have, however, found a number of supporting references. Ghosh 1989 is a full-blown encyclopaedia of Indian archaeology. This has been supplemented by a number of books from Dilip Chakrabarti synthesising the archaeology of specific regions (I'm sure of both Bangladesh and West Bengal, but there may be more; no references handy, sorry); I believe there's been similar regional work in Pakistan, which Mr. Ansari can perhaps confirm or deny. In addition, a full-blown synthesis of protohistorical and early historical archaeology has appeared, cited below as Allchin 1995. This contains two different discussions of the "Aryans", quite at odds with each other. But the contributors (again trustworthy, George Erdosy and F. R. Allchin) leave no doubt that the fact of Aryans arriving is settled. I'm sorry that this is the best I can offer. Mr. Ansari and I were supposed to go back to the libraries after our last debate ran its course, revise our respective opera, and come back here in the spring. I believe he's ready now, but I'm not: shame on me. All the same. His case for a full-blown "Aryan invasion" with all the blood and gore that implies is stronger than I then gave it credit for, though I continue to prefer a model more analogous to that by which Spanish became the dominant language of Mexico (say), or perhaps less violent than that. Much of my evidence for this has to do with pottery sequences and such from sites which I don't believe Mr. Ansari is that familiar with*, just as much of his "invasion" evidence has to do with sites I don't know well. But either way, there doesn't seem to be any room left to deny that Sanskrit came from elsewhere. While this post is rather less confident than my ones in the prior debate, by the way, it's got something those generally didn't. I now have my bibliography on this stuff stored where I post from: so this one has REFERENCES. These follow. Joe Bernstein * Some of what I mean by this: At least as of 1987, I was pretty firmly convinced: that the dish-and-bowl assemblage which characterises protohistoric pottery in the region had originated in the Doab, based partly on Sahi 1978; that the Black-and-Red pottery technique had been learnt from the south (common sense, see H. Singh 1982); that the first settlers in UP other than the mysterious Ochre-Coloured Pottery folks were from the hills south of the Doab (I'm having trouble finding a good reference for this; try G. R. Sharma in Kenoyer X below, if Sharma has an article there); and that both rice and iron (Chakrabarti 1977 on the latter) reached the Doab from Bengal. On top of all this, I was confident, on the basis of Erdosy 1985 and other sources, that the urbanisation of the region was more or less independent of, and prior to, the arrival of the Vedic Aryans. Ultimately, my argument was that they just didn't matter that much. How much of this I can still sustain remains to be seen. Items referenced in this post: Allchin 1995: THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF EARLY HISTORIC SOUTH ASIA: THE EMERGENCE OF CITIES AND STATES, by F. R. Allchin, with contributions from George Erdosy, R. A. E. Coningham, D. K. Chakrabarti, and Bridget Allchin. (Erdosy has since changed his name to Muhammad Usman Erdosy, according to the preface.) Cambridge: Cambridge, 1995. Chakrabarti 1977: "Distribution of iron ores and the archaeological evidence of early iron in India" by Dilip K. Chakrabarti. JOURNAL OF THE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL HISTORY OF THE ORIENT 20: 166-84. I am quite aware that this topic has remained controversial; at the time I wrote my paper, *this* paper still looked good to me, and I haven't had the opportunity to catch up or reassess my judgement then. My apologies for lacking full references to Chakrabarti's books on Bangladesh etc. I've seen them in the library of Northwestern University, and I'd look them up there now if this computer would allow that, but at the moment it won't. Erdosy 1985: "Settlement archaeology of the Kausambi region" by George (now Muhammad Usman) Erdosy. MAN AND ENVIRONMENT 9: 66-79. Gaur 1983: EXCAVATIONS AT ATRANJIKHERA, by R. C. Gaur. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1983. Ghosh 1989: AN ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF INDIAN ARCHAEOLOGY, edited by A. Ghosh. New Delhi: Munshiram Monoharlal, 1989. Two volumes, one with entries on topics, the other with entries on sites. (I've seen this cited as also appearing in Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1991, as AN ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF ANCIENT INDIA, but have not seen this edition.) Jarrige 1979: FOUILLES DE PIRAK, by Jean-Francois Jarrige, Marielle Santoni, Jean-Francois Enault, et al. Paris: Diffusion de Boccard, 1979. Meadow 1991: Meadow, Richard H., ed. 1991. Harappa Excavations 1986-1990: A Multidisciplinary Approach to Third Millennium Urbanism. Monographs in World Archaeology No. 3. Prehistory Press. Madison, WI. (Entry from Ben Diebold) Sahi 1978: "New light on the life of the Painted Grey Ware people as revealed from excavations at Jakhera (Dist. Etah)" by M. D. N. Sahi. MAN AND ENVIRONMENT 2: 101-3. H. Singh 1982: HISTORY AND ARCHAEOLOGY OF BLACK-AND-RED WARE (CHALCOLITHIC PERIOD) by H. N. Singh. Delhi: Sundeep Prakashan, 1982. Additional items for which I have references handy, which seem likely to be of interest (credit to Ben Diebold and Moin Ansari for these, except for King 1984, Lal 1984 and Shaffer 1981): Clark, John E. and William J. Parry 1990 " Craft Specialization and Cultural Complexity." Research in Economic Anthropology, vol. 12, pp: 289-346. (from Moin Ansari. I haven't yet looked for this, but the title certainly relates to the topics of current discussions of Harappan civ) Michael Jansen `Forgotten Cities of the Indus' 1993 or 1994 - (from Moin Ansari; apparently a good introductory book; the Jansens have been central to recent work systematically re-examining the records of the Mohenjo-daro digs) Old Problems and New Perspectives in the Archaeology of South Asia edited by J.M.Kenoyer, Wisconsin Archaeological Reports Vol 2, 1989. [from conference in 89] (from Moin Ansari) Nope, the conference was in 1986 or 1987, I was there. Lots of good stuff here. If there's an article by G. R. Sharma or R. C. Gaur there, check it for material on the earliest settlers of the Doab. Kenoyer, Jonathan Mark. 1991a. "The Indus Valley Tradition of Pakistan and Western India." Journal of World Prehistory. 5:4:331-385. (from Ben Diebold: I've skimmed it; a good solid basic article on the Harappan civ; at first glance not much about Aryans) King 1984: "Some archaeological problems regarding Gangetic cultures in early historical India" by Anna King. In STUDIES IN THE ARCHAEOLOGY AND PALAEOANTHROPOLOGY OF SOUTH ASIA, ed. Kenneth A. R. Kennedy and Gregory L. Possehl, pp. 109-19. New Delhi: Oxford & IBH, 1984. Forcefully presents the case against invasions during the first millennium BC in the Doab and adjacent regions. Lal 1984: SETTLEMENT HISTORY AND RISE OF CIVILIZATION IN GANGA-YAMUNA DOAB: FROM 1500 B. C. - 300 A. D. by Makkhan Lal. Delhi: B. R., 1984. Though strongly bound by the old consensus, this is still a superb synthesis of knowledge on the subject as of its date, and includes the first substantial settlement survey done in north India (I believe M. Rafique Mughal's work in the Cholistan area of Pakistan preceded, but am not that familiar with that). Lukacs, John R. 1992. "Dental Paleopathology and Agricultural Intensification in South Asia: New Evidence From Bronze Age Harappa." American Journal of Physical Anthropology 87:133-150. (from Ben Diebold) Shaffer 1981: "The protohistoric period in the Eastern Punjab: a preliminary assessment" by Jim G. Shaffer. In A. H. Dani, ed., INDUS CIVILISATION: NEW PERSPECTIVES, pages 65-102. Islamabad: Centre for the Study of the Civilization of Central Asia, Quaid-i-Azam University, 1981. The only thing I've read which synthesises the relevant period in any of the Punjab, though one hopes it's now fully superseded by Allchin 1995. -- Joe Bernstein, free-lance writer and bookstore worker joe@sfbooks.com speaking for myself and nobody else http://www.tezcat.com/~josephb/
In article <56js9j$aa9@stc06.ctd.ornl.gov>, jonathan says... > >mankin@bcf.usc.edu (Eric Mankin) wrote: >>In article <56il85$3gk@fridge-nf0.shore.net>, whittet@shore.net (Steve >>Whittet) wrote: >> >>* 1.) Mans arrival in North America was about 12,000 years BP >>* Though earlier dates were claimed some decades back, none of the >>* 30 some odd early claims in the Americas have remained uncontroversial. >> >>My understanding is that this isn't quite correct. I think there >>are authenticated remains in Alaska earlier than this -- my understanding >>is that humans lived in Alaska for some time, but were unable to proceed >>until the retreat of the ice sheet slightly more than 12000 Y BP opened >>an ice-free corridor allowing passage south. >> Eric Mankin > > From discussions I've seen in the literature, the various sites that turn up >in Alaska may not actually be any older than 12,500 y.a. (approximately >contemporaneous with Clovis); I think the carbon dating evidence/stratigraphy >is still somewhat controversial, but that hardly anyone thinks that there were >humans at those sites before 15,000 y.a. > Any latest opinions on those Alaskan sites? > Jonathan Adams > In "The Colonization of Beringa and the Peopling of the New World" Science, Vol 259, 1 January 1993, John F Hoffecker, W Roger Powers Ted Goebel begins by saying "(1.) Although the presence of a population in North and South America at the close of the Pleistocene roughly 11,000 years before present (year BP) (2.) has been thouroughly documented in the archaeological record, prehistorians continue to debate the question of earlier settlement." The article then proceedes to document "recent finds in Alaska of an industry older than 11,000 years BP that exhibits many similarities to early sites in mid latitude North and South America" "The land bridge probably reached its maximum extent between 20,000 and 18,000 years BP" "Until recently it was believed that a rapid rise in sea level after the Last Glacial Maximum cold peak reduced the land bridge to a narrow isthmus at Anadyr strait as early as 15,500 yr BP, which was flooded by 14,400 yrs BP. "New studies of global sea level since 17,000 BP have underlined the need for sifgnificant revision of the previously accepted chronology." "A land connection between Northeast Siberia and Alaska appears to have survived as late as 11,00 or 10,000 yr BP" "Retreating ice masses in western Canada yeilded access from Beringa to the North American Plains by at least 14,000 years BP. "The poverty of large mammalian prey inhibited human colonization of Beringa until the spread of Mesic shrub tundra vegitation recorded in the birch zone (after 14,000 yr BP) (30)" The stratigraphic profiles from each site illustrated in fig 2 p 48 show that the oldests artifact horizons are the Nenarna or pre microblade complexes and after that the Denali Complex. Dry Creek, 11,120 +/- 85 yrs BP, Nenarna Panquine Creek, 10,100 +/-130 yrs BP Denali Walker Road , 11,820 +/-200 yrs BP Nenarna Walker Road , 11,300 +/-120 yrs BP Nenarna Walker Road , 11,170 +/-180 yrs BP Nenarna Walker Road , 11,010 +/-230 yrs BP Nenarna Owl Ridge, 11,340 +/- 150 yrs BP Nenarna? Broken Mammoth, 11,770 +/- 220 yrs BP, Nenarna Broken Mammoth, 11,770 +/- 210 yrs BP, Nenarna Broken Mammoth, 11,510 +/- 120 yrs BP, Nenarna Broken Mammoth, 11,280 +/- 190 yrs BP, Nenarna Broken Mammoth, 11,040 +/- 260 yrs BP, Nenarna Healy Lake, 10,133 +/- 174 yrs BP, Nenarna? Chugwater, 9460 +/- 130 yrs BP Nenarna Central Kamchatka - Ushki I: 14,300 13,600 years BP "There is a amall but growing body of negative evidence against Beringian colonization before 12,000 years BP." "Clovis occupations tend to cluster between 11,200 and 10,900 years BP and not as previously thought between 11,500 and 11,000 years BP" "Paleo Indians in Beringa: Evidence from Artic Alaska" Science Vol 263 4 Febuary 1994, Michael L Kunz and Richard E Rearnier Excavations at the Mesa site place humans at the site between 9,730 and 11,660 years BP with projectile points. "Routes: Alternate Migration Corridors for Early Man in North America" K R Fladmark, American Antiquity Vol 44 Nov 1 1979 Studies of maritime occupation of the Queen Charlottes 9,000-10,000 BP. Examines the idea of coasting the Northern pacific Island Chains as opposed to entering the Americas through an ice free corridor and points out that there are no early sites in said ice free corridor. Sitka - An interdisciplinary on line discussion group focused on Alaska and particularly on Fladmarks refugia which has recently found human remains in the 9,000 BP range. 9,000 BP is c 7,000 BC Now just to really stir thing up, Meadowcroft Rock Shelter, a number of East Coast Maritime Moorhead or Red Paint sites and other occupations from Maine to Florida are coming up in the same range suggesting Alaska was not the only possible route to the New World. steveReturn to Top