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America Before

Page 65

by Graham Hancock


  31. Associated Press, “Standing Rock Activist Accused of Firing at Police Gets Nearly Five Years in Prison” (Guardian, July 12, 2018).

  APPENDIX 1

  1. Thomas A. Gregor and Donald Tuzin (eds.), Gender in Amazonia and Melanesia: An Exploration of the Comparative Method (University of California Press, 2001), 1.

  2. Key papers that constitute the Paleoamerican hypothesis are (in order of publication):

  C. L. Brace et al., “Old World Sources of the First New World Human Inhabitants: A Comparative Craniofacial View,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 98, no. 17 (2001), 10017–10022; W. A. Neves and M. Hubbe, “Cranial Morphology of Early Americans from Lagoa Santa, Brazil: Implications for the Settlement of the New World.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 102, no. 51 (2005), 18309–18314; R. González‐José et al., “The Peopling of America: Craniofacial Shape Variation on a Continental Scale and Its Interpretation from an Interdisciplinary View,” American Journal of Physical Anthropology: The Official Publication of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists 137, no. 2 (2008), 175–187; M. Hubbe, W. A. Neves, and K. Harvati, “Testing Evolutionary and Dispersion Scenarios for the Settlement of the New World,” PLoS One 5, no. 6 (2010), e11105; D. L. Jenkins et al., “Clovis-Age Western Stemmed Projectile Points and Human Coprolites at the Paisley Caves,” Science 337, no. 6091 (2012), 223–228; K. E. Graf, C. V. Ketron, and M. R. Waters (eds.), Paleoamerican Odyssey (Texas A&M University Press, 2014), 397–412; J. C. Chatters et al., “Late Pleistocene Human Skeleton and mtDNA Link Paleoamericans and Modern Native Americans,” Science 344, no. 6185 (2014), 750–754.

  3. Maanasa Raghavan et al., “Genomic Evidence for the Pleistocene and Recent Population History of Native Americans,” Science 349.6250 (2015), aab3884.

  4. Ibid.

  5. S. Ivan Perez et al., “Discrepancy Between Canial and DNA Data of Early Americans: Implications for American Peopling,” PLoS One (May 29, 2009), 1, http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0005746.

  6. Germán Manríquez et al., “Morphometric and mtDNA Analyses of Archaic Skeletal Remains from Southwestern South America,” Chungara: Revista de Antropología Chilena 43, no. 2 (2011), 283.

  7. Pontus Skoglund et al., “Genetic Evidence for Two Founding Populations of the Americas,” Nature 525, no. 3 (September 2015), 107.

  8. Ibid.

  9. See, for example, Neves and Hubbe, “Cranial Morphology of Early Americans from Lagoa Santa, Brazil.” Though not substantially in dispute, there are dissenting opinions. For a recent example, see Raghavan et al., “Genomic Evidence for the Pleistocene and Recent Population History of Native Americans,” aab3884–7.

  10. See Neves and Hubbe, “Cranial Morphology of Early Americans from Lagoa Santa, Brazil,” 18309.

  11. Ibid.

  12. Ibid.

  13. Ibid., 18313–18314.

  14. Ibid., 18309.

  15. Skoglund et al., “Genetic Evidence for Two Founding Populations of the Americas.”

  16. Raghavan et al., “Genomic Evidence for the Pleistocene and Recent Population History of Native Americans.”

  17. In an online discussion with Lev Michael, assistant professor in the Linguistics department at the University of California, Berkeley, and an expert on Amazonian languages who cites this comment by Dziebel in his “Evaluating the Linguistic Evidence for an Out of America Hypothesis,” online here: https://anthroling.wordpress.com/2008/06/11/evaluating-the-linguistic-evidence-for-an-out-of-america-hypothesis/.

  18. Austin Whittall, “Language Diversity and the Peopling of America,” October 18, 2015, http://patagoniamonsters.blogspot.co.uk/2015/10/language-diversity-and-peopling-of.html.

  19. Ibid.

  20. See “Papua New Guinea:” https://www.ethnologue.com/statistics/country.

  21. Whittall, “Language Diversity and the Peopling of America.”

  22. Which he sources from Joanna Nichols, “Mobility and Ancient Society in Asia and the Americas,” pp. 117–126, chapter titled “How America Was Colonised: Linguistic Evidence,” https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-15138-0_9.

  23. Whittall, “Language Diversity and the Peopling of America.”

  24. Table from “Indigenous Languages of South America,” http://aboutworldlanguages.com/indigenous-languages-of-south-america.

  25. See A. I. Aikhenvald and A. Y. Aikhenvald, Languages of the Amazon (Oxford University Press, 2012), 1: “Lowland Amazonia boasts over 350 languages grouped into some fifteen language families, plus a fair number of isolates.”

  26. Ibid. “The linguistic diversity of the Amazon is remarkable in every respect. Its only rival is that of the New Guinea area.”

  27. Gregor and Tuzin, Gender in Amazonia and Melanesia, 1.

  28. Ibid.

  29. “Amazonia and Melanesia: Gender and Anthropological Comparison,” details here: http://www.wennergren.org/history/amazonia-and-melanesia-gender-and-anthropological-comparison.

  30. Gregor and Tuzin, Gender in Amazonia and Melanesia, 52–53.

  31. Ibid., 302.

  32. Ibid., 304.

  33. Ibid., 147–149.

  34. Ibid., 310.

  35. Ibid., 38.

  36. Ibid., 1, 309, 320–321.

  37. Ibid., 315.

  38. Ibid., 318.

  39. Ibid., 310.

  40. Ibid., 13–14: “Typically men’s organisations are associated with meeting grounds, or men’s houses, where men conduct secret initiations and feasts. The cults address similar spirit entities, conceal similar secret paraphernalia and sound-producing instruments and punish female intruders with gang rape or death. Taken together the pattern of spatial separation, initiations and punishment of female intruders constitutes a ‘complex,’ or adherence of traits, that is found widely throughout Melanesia, and in at least four major and distantly separated culture regions in lowland South America.”

  41. Ibid., 14.

  42. Ibid., 330.

  43. Ibid., 331–332.

  44. Ibid., 1.

  APPENDIX 2

  1. Robert H. Fuson, Legendary Islands of the Ocean Sea 11 (Pineapple Press, Florida, 1995), in particular pp. 185–120. Fuson makes the case also that the island named Antilia, placed to the south of “Satanaze” on the Pizzagano Chart, is Taiwan. I review the whole matter in detail in Underworld: The Mysterious Origins of Civilization (2002), 626–639.

  2. Graham Hancock, Underworld, 631.

  3. Ibid., 22–23. All calculations of ancient sea levels in Underworld were the work of Dr. Glenn Milne, then of Durham University, a world expert in the subject.

  4. Ibid., 500–502.

  5. Graham Hancock, Fingerprints of the Gods, (Crown, 1995), 4–9.

  6. Ibid., 3–25.

  7. Ibid., 3–13.

  APPENDIX 3

  1. P. A. Colinvaux et al., “Amazonian and Neotropical Plant Communities on Glacial Time-Scales: The Failure of the Aridity and Refuge Hypotheses,” Quaternary Science Reviews 19 (January 2000), 141.

  2. Katherine J. Willis and Robert J. Whittaker, “The Refugial Debate,” Science (February 25, 2000), 1406–1407.

  3. P. A. Colinvaux and P. E. de Oliveira, “Amazon Plant Diversity and Climate Through the Cenozoic,” Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 166 (February 2001), 57, 60.

  4. Thomas P. Kastner and Miguel A. Goni, “Constancy in the Vegetation of the Amazon Basin During the Late Pleistocene: Evidence from the Organic Matter Composition of Amazon Deep Sea Fan Sediments,” Geology (April 2003), 291.

  5. M. B. Bush et al., “Amazonian Paleoecological Histories: One Hill, Three Watersheds,” Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 214 (November 25, 2004), 359.

  6. Carlos D’Apolito et al., “The Hill of Six Lakes Revisited: New Data and Re-Evaluation of a Key Pleistocene Amazon Site,” Quaternary Science Reviews 76 (September 2013), 153–154.

  7. Ibid.

  8. John Francis Carson et al., “Environmental Impac
t of Geometric Earthwork Construction in Pre-Columbian Amazonia,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 22 (July 2014), 10497.

  9. D. Fontes, R. C. Cordeiro, et al., “Paleoenvironmental Dynamics in South Amazonia, Brazil, During the Last 35,000 Years Inferred from Pollen and Geochemical Records of Lago do Saci,” Quaternary Science Reviews 173 (October 1, 2017), 177.

  10. M. Goulding, R. B. Barthem, and R. Duenas, The Smithsonian Atlas of the Amazon (Smithsonian Books, 2003), 19. “Approximately 85 per cent of the South American rainforest … is found in the Amazon Basin.”

  11. All figures are taken from the World Bank, “Land Area (sq. km.),” https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/ag.lnd.totl.k2?name_desc=false, apart from Europe, taken from S. Adams, A. Ganeri, and A. Kay, Geography of the World: The Essential Family Guide to Geography and Culture (DK, 2006), 78.

  12. Email from Graham Hancock to Professor Renato Cordeiro dated March 12, 2018.

  13. Professor Cordeiro’s kind reply (email of March 14, 2018) contained some technical terms that I feel I need to translate here before getting to the meat of what he said:

  Quaternary—the reference is to our current era, roughly from 2.5 million years ago until the present.

  Edaphic characteristics—the reference is to the role of factors such as water content, acidity, aeration, and the availability of nutrients, that is, factors inherent in the soil itself rather than consequent upon climate.

  Campinaranas—these are neotropical ecoregions in the Brazilian Amazon.

  Caatingas—another kind of ecoregion of the Brazilian Amazon, in this case characterized by desert vegetation.

  Pollinic—the reference is to all matters relating to, containing, or derived from pollen.

  “In order to understand the vegetation fluctuations during the quaternary,” Professor Cordeiro told me, “one must try to understand some of the current distribution of vegetation. Basically in the Amazon we have evergreen forests, deciduous forests, tree savanna, shrub savanna, open savanna and fields. In some regions vegetation is influenced by edaphic characteristics such as the campinaranas and caatingas of the Rio Negro where vast areas covered by quartz sands, with low nutrients and low water retention, limit the occurrence of vegetation with large biomass. Along the rivers are the gallery forests which, probably have been relatively well preserved during drier climatic periods. Varzea forests (floodplain forest) are still distributed along flood areas and inundated forests (regionally called igapó) that occur inside the river bed until 6 meters depth. This vegetation type mosaic produces variable amounts of pollens and therefore different responses in the sedimentary records as a function of the depositional environment (lakes near the Rios channel, e.g., Lago Saci, Lago La Gaiba; lakes far from the dynamics of rivers e.g. Carajás Lakes, Lagoa da Pata; marine deposits). As an example of this complexity of interpretations it is possible to mention that marine records have a pollinic signal very influenced by galleries forests and floodplain forests that would have been preserved during drier climatic periods. The Saci lake, because it is relatively close to the São Benedito II River, probably had a vegetation with higher biomass in relation to sites outside of the river influence. Therefore, due to this complexity between the generation of the different types of pollens of different vegetation types in relation to the depositional environment, many interpretations do not accurately depict the regional vegetation physiognomy.”

  14. For example, see M. B. Bush et al., “Paleotemperature Estimates for the Lowland Americas between 30 Degrees South and 30 Degrees North at the Last Glacial Maximum,” chapter 17 in Interhemispheric Climate Linkages, ed. Vera Markgraf (Academic Press, 2001), 303. See also Bush et al., “Amazonian Paleoecological Histories,” 360.

  INDEX

  Ab

  Above World

  Acre

  Acuña, Cristóbal de

  Adena

  ADEs. See Amazonian Dark Earths

  Adovasio, James M.

  Agassiz, Lake

  agriculture

  Aju-Tasch (Bear Rock)

  Aleutian Islanders

  Algonquian

  Allen, Thurman

  Alpha Cygni

  Altai,. See also Denisova Cave

  Amazonia

  agriculture in

  Australasia and

  forests of

  in Ice Age

  lost civilizations and

  Melanesia and

  Men’s cults of

  Native Americans in

  Nazca Lines and

  Papua New Guinea and

  plant medicines in

  shamans of

  smallpox in

  terra preta in

  Amazonia: Man and Culture in a Counterfeit Paradise (Meggers)

  Amazonian Dark Earths (ADEs)

  Amazonian geoglyphs

  ayahuasca and

  Nazca Lines and

  Stonehenge and

  American Holocaust (Stannard)

  Amit

  Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley (Squier and Davis, E.)

  Ancient Works

  Anderson, David

  Anderson, Raymond

  Andros

  Angkor Wat

  Anker, Arthur

  Antarctica

  Anthony, John

  antler tools

  Anzick-1

  The Archeological Atlas of Ohio (Mills)

  Arhuaco

  Aroana

  Asatryan, Papin

  astronomers

  astronomy,. See also specific topics

  Athabascans

  Atlantis

  Australasia

  Amazonia and

  linguistic diversity in

  Native Americans and

  autumn equinox

  at Angkor Wat

  at Great Sphinx of Giza

  at Watson Brake

  Avebury

  Aveni, Anthony F.

  ayahuasca

  death and

  geometry and

  Milky Way and

  as Telepathine,

  azimuth

  at Monks Mound

  at Poverty Point

  at Saginaw Bay impact

  at Serpent Mound

  of summer solstice

  at Watson Brake

  at Woodhenge

  Azoury, Ricardo

  Aztec library, burning of

  Ba,

  Baalbek

  Badawy, Alexander

  Balboa, Vasco Nuñez de

  Balée, William

  Ballcourt Mound, at Poverty Point

  Banana Bayou Mounds

  Barasana

  Bardo (the Between)

  Bauval, Robert

  Bear Rock (Aju-Tasch)

  Belaude, Luisa

  Below World

  bend-break technique

  Bering land bridge

  Beringian standstill model, for Siberia

  the Between (Bardo)

  Bimini

  biomass burning, in YD

  Bird Mound, at Poverty Point, 267, p3

  Birdman

  Black Earth (terra preta)

  Blackwater Draw

  Bluefish Caves

  Bølling-Allerød interstadial

  Bonaldo, Alexandre B.

  bone tools

  Bonnemère, Pascale

  Bonnichsen, Robson

  Book of Gates,

  Book of the Breaths of Life,

  Book of What Is in the Duat,

  Book of What Is in the Netherworld,

  bracelet

  brain-smasher

  Brecher, Kenneth

  Brown, James

  Brown, Joseph Epes

  Budge, E. A. Wallis

  Builder Gods

  burins

  Burks, Jarrod

  Bush, M. B.

  C-14. See carbon-dating

  Cabral, Mariana Petry

  Caddo

  Cahokia. See Monks Mound

  Calado, Manoel

  Califor
nia wildfires

  Callahan, Richard

  Cameron, Terry

  Caney Mounds

  equinox at

  summer solstice at

  Watson Brake and

  capsicum (chili peppers)

  carbon-dating (C-14, radiocarbon dating)

  in Amazonia

  at Anzick-1

  at Caney Mounds

  at Conly

  at Fazenda Colorada

  at Frenchman’s Bend

  in Mal’ta

  at Monte Verde

  at Painel do Pilão

  of Poverty Point

  at Rego Grande

  of Severino Calazans and

  at Watson Brake

  for YD

  Carlson, Randall

  Carolina Bays

  Carvajal, Gaspar de

  Cashinahua

  cassava (manioc)

  Caverna da Pedra Pintada

  Cerutti, Richard

  Champollion, Jean-François

  Channeled Scablands

  charcoal

  in ADEs

  from Monte Sano

  Murray Springs in

  at Rego Grande

  at Serpent Mound

  from YD

  Charles, Charles

  Cherokee

  chert

  Chickasaw

  chili peppers (capsicum)

  Christianity

  Cinq-Mars, Jacques

  Circle of Osiris

  circle-octagon

  cities

  in Amazonia

  of gods

  City of the Sun (Heliopolis),

  Clark, John

  Clement, Charles R.

  climate change,. See also Younger Dryas

  Clovis

  Anzick-1 and

  Bluefish Caves and

  extinction of

  land bridge and

  lost civilizations and

  Monte Verde and

  at Murray Springs

  Siberia and

  South America and

  stone tools of

  Topper and

  YDB and

  Clube, Victor

  cocoa trees

  Coffin Texts

  Coles Creek culture

  Colinvaux, P. A.

  Collins, Andrew

  comet impact. See also

 

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