Whenever people are involved in
making decisions and interpreting data, there is always the problem of personal
viewpoints to consider. This is especially true when looking at the results of
archaeological and anthropological findings, since both are based more on
personal interpretation than any truly scientific (factual) basis. The
archaeologist, as an example, has a pattern of diffusion within which his work
is viewed—a pattern of development from stone age to pre-pottery, to pottery, in
determining the cultural stages regarding the ancient development of an area.
From chipping stone to hollowing out a gourd for drinking to making
ceramic pottery—these are the stages of archaeology
Mesoamericanists rarely mention
South America, even though the sites in South America are older and superior in
workmanship design, and function than those of Mesoamerica. In addition, anthropologists
in the South Pacific (Austeralia, New Zealand) and in Hawaii, champion the
movement of man across the Pacific from west to east, and the expansion of
Polynesia as far east as Easter Island without any acceptance of an east to west
movement, despite the work of Thor Heyerdahl and the known currents that move
in the opposite direction.
In addition, archaeology has
several stages--simply put and speaking generally, they are found in the
following categories:
• Paleolithic (old stone [age])—2.6
million to 12,000 years ago; when they claim humans developed from Homo bibilis to homo sapiens;
used wood, bone and the most primitive (knapped) stone tools; people lived
primarily in eastern Africa, grouped in bands, developed religious ritual,
buried their dead, began works of art; began moving into southern Europe and
Asia, China, Indonesia and the Mediterranean (this period covered nine distinct
classification of Paleolithic geoclimati episodes)
• Mesolithic (middle stone
[age]), sometimes called Epipaleolithic—10,000 to 5,000 B.C. (and as much as
20,000 B.C.), which is claimed to be the end of the Paleolithic and the start of the Neolithic; age of
purely hunting and gathering; initial stage of domestication of wild plants and
animals; lived in villages and huts, and beginning of walled cities; chipped
stone tools (microliths), moving toward polished stone tools, including burins
and end-scrapers; rise of agriculture and the introduction of farming and
herding of animals), lived in timber long houses.
• Pre-Pottery Neolithic A and B—8300
to 6000 B.C.; absence of pottery vessels; domestication of wheat and barley,
domestication of sheep, goats, cattle and pigs; emergence of settlements;
beginning of walls and structures.
• Pottery Neolithic—5500 to 3800
B.C.; invention of the kiln and movement from gourds to pottery; development of
wood-carving, basketry, weaving etc.; spread of food-producing communities in
large numbers; the rise of urban civilization, the emergence of towns and large
settlements with satellite villages; beginning of wealth and power centers.
• Bronze Age (Early,
Intermediate, Late)—3300 to 1300 B.C. Primary form of metalworking. Smelting
copper and alloying with tin; first writing (cuneiform and hieroglyphs).
• Iron Age (Early, Middle and
Late)—1300 B.C. to 700 A.D. Earliest texts in manuscript form; Sanskrit and
Chinese literature flourished, along with the oldest parts of the Hebrew Bible.
Forging began in metalworking.
In addition, archaeologists
depend heavily on radiocarbon dating to aid them in determining dates; however,
radiocarbon dating, better known as carbon-14 dating, is itself a questionable
science, though highly accepted, dating method. It is not that the system is
based on faulty premises for the concept of the carbon leakage to date once
living organisms is sound; however the problem lies in its calibration, i.e.,
the way the data provided is interpreted. Take its beginning, when its
developer, physicist Willard Libby, found from his own experiments that the Earth was less than 20,000 years old;
however, decided that every one knew the Earth was billions of years old, and adjusted
his findings accordingly, thus providing readings of millions of years instead
of hundreds, making all subsequent measurements determined on the wrong age basis.
Add this to the preconceived
ideas, beliefs, and standards of the archaeologist and anthropologist, we find
today an exaggerated understanding of the Earth’s age, and all things upon and
within it. We also find that science has preset concepts as to how man
developed, where he originated, and over what routes he migrated. We also have
prejudicial attitudes about 1) religion, 2) God’s role in our lives and
development, and 3) the abilities or lack thereof regarding accomplishments of early cultures. Thus,
while the one, based upon error and bias notions, and the other rejected out of
prejudicial attitudes, we find ourselves in a world of inaccurate and bias
views of the past and how man came to be and how he arrived at the places in
which we find him anciently.
In this regard, no one in the
professional fields determining these beliefs accepts that ancient man was
capable of sailing across vast oceans in the types of canoes attributed to
them, nor that they were capable of building ships that only appeared thousands
of years later. As a result, science claims that man’s migrant route came over
non-existent land bridges, along routes that make little, if any, sense, and
spread over thousands of miles of land instead of settling where they were. As
an example, what would cause a people to travel northward from their warm clime
into the cold country of the north, leaving the warmer climes of their
homelands, to pass over a so-called Siberian land bridge in the age of glaciers
that covered the northern continents, somehow finding an ice-free corridor, and
then coming into warmer lands, such as what is now Canada, the United States,
Mexico, etc., yet continue to travel clear to the southern regions of South America?
However, science clings to this
ridiculous idea since it is the only way they can justify a movement from the
Old World to the New World. In the same token, since they cannot accept the
movement of people by sea across the wide expanse of oceans until at least around 1000 A.D., they claim man moved from Indonesia
eastward (against all known winds and currents), sailing from island to island
on short trips eastward and eventually, spreading all across the Pacific Ocean—eventually reaching and
settling the Americas, specifically South America.
Massive settlements and huge cities span hundreds of acres and many square miles that rival the best construction found in the Old World and built in B.C. times, are scattered all over western South America
How else could they account for
the development of civilizations in South America that built such awe-inspiring
cities and empires as the Spanish eventually found there in the 16th
century? The fact that all known criteria to determine settlement shows a
movement across the Pacific in the opposite direction, anthropologists and archaeologists
bend over backward to develop an opposite movement than the known facts
indicate.
In addition, those Polynesian
archaeologists and anthropologists (New Zealand to Easter Island to Hawaii) are
bias toward movement from west to east across the Pacific and settlement of
South America, since it is their ancestors they are describing and attributing
far greater achievements to them than they actually achieved (see the last
post).
So widespread is this belief of
west to east movement that cultural anthropologist Richard Scaglion of the
University of Pittsburg claims in the face of incontrivertable evidence to the
contrary, “But most researchers see few signs of Amerindian excursions into the
Pacific.” That is, those of South America moving westward into the Pacific. Instead
he argues that “Polynesians may have arrived at the southern coast of South
America and sailed north using the prevailing current to the Ecuadorian port of
Guayaquil, the only sheltered port in South America north of the rocky southern
coast of Chile. The Canara people once lived from this area of the coast into
the Andes highlands, making the sweet potato accessible to coastal visitors.
And here the current veers sharply west. Computer simulations show that the
most successful return (westward) from the coast would be from Guayaquil to
the Polynesians.” Scaglion then adds, “making this area a possible focus of
trans-Pacific contact.”
Isn’t it interesting that the
most likely point of movement is from the advanced civilizations along the west
coast of South America, using the currents that flow directly down to
Polynesia. But to reach South America, Polynesians would have to drop far south
into the West Wind Drift currents of the Southern Ocean to reach the Humboldt
(Peruvian) Current to sail up the coast of South America as Scaglion claims.
Using Scaglion’s own map, consider movement from (Yellow Arrow) South
America (Bay of Guayaquil) westward, which currents take a ship out and down
into Polynesia, as opposed to leaving western Polynesia (White Arrow) and
dropping far south to the (Green Arrow) Southern Ocean, to then cross thousands
miles to South America and the Humboldt (Peruvian) Current to travel northward.
Which seems the more likely for a people to do?
Would people most likely travel
in “exceedingly large” ships built by Hagoth, sailing from the Bay of Guayaquil
westward into the Pacific (Alma 63:5,8) to the Marquesa Islands of Polynesia,
which is about 4000 miles of open ocean. Or is it more likely that people
sailed from Tonga southward in outrigger canoes beyond New Zealand to the
Southern Ocean, then eastward with the only eastward moving current in the
South Pacific to South America across 7100 miles of open ocean, then upward
along the coast to the Bay of Guayaquil for a total of 10,673 miles overall.
Which seems the most likely that would have been attempted by an early culture?
When one’s mind is made up
before one starts, they are not likely to come up with an accurate answer. Nor
are they likely to see the truth lurking somewhere behind their pre-conceived
ideas.
Thanks for sharing, nice post!
ReplyDelete- Máy đưa võng hay thiet bi dua vong tu dong trở thành 1 phần của các gia đình Việt. Máy dua vong tu dong nhỏ gọn, may dua vong tiết kiệm điện lại rất an toàn.
- Trên thị trường có nhiều loại máy đưa võng em bé với giá cả và chất lượng khác nhau, việc lựa chọn máy đưa võng chất lượng và với nhãn hiệu uy tín, vong dua em be chất lượng, An Thái Sơn tự hào là địa chỉ bán máy đưa võng giá rẻ uy tín nhất.
Chia sẽ các bạn bí quyết làm thế nào để cho bé đi ngủ sớm hay những món ăn giảm cân cho trẻ béo phì, bí quyết giúp trẻ hết biếng ăn hiệu quả, cách trị chứng mất ngủ ở trẻ em hiệu quả hay mách mẹ bí quyết cải thiện làn da cho bé hiệu quả nhất, chia sẻ bí quyết giúp bé ngủ ngon giấc hay tìm hiểu về đông trùng hạ thảo và những cách chế biến đông trùng hạ thảo nguyên con, chia sẻ các mẹ nguyên nhân và cách chữa trị bệnh rụng tóc ở trẻ em hiệu quả, những cách chống nắng cho bé hiệu quả trong những ngày hè hay thực phẩm giúp giải độc gan cho bạn, thực phẩm thiên nhiên giúp nhanh liền sẹo hiệu quả, cách phòng trị bệnh viêm khớp ở trẻ em an toàn, những thực phẩm bổ não cho trẻ giúp cải thiện trí nhớ, những thực phẩm không nên ăn khi thiếu máu não bạn nên lưu ý, chia sẻ thực phẩm cho người bị rối loạn tiền đình hay người bị bệnh mất ngủ nên ăn gì hoặc món ăn chữa bệnh mất ngủ cực hiệu quả!
Những thực phẩm giúp đẹp da tại http://nhungthucphamgiupda.blogspot.com/
Thực phẩm giúp bạn trẻ đẹp tại http://thucphamgiuptre.blogspot.com/
Thực phẩm làm tăng tại http://thucphamlamtang.blogspot.com/