The 'Native Americans' are going to be pissed. They'll probably sue so they can get their hands on the evidence and 'repatriate' it like they did the Kenniwick Man skeleton.
We lived here far longer than that. Search Great Tartaria and Mudflood. 18,000 years ago, we were free from oppression, traveling the stars and knowing all that mortals could. Then Atlantis fell, and civilization was set back to square one, only with evil overlords instead of a beneficent and omnipresent Creator in public control. The pendulum will soon swing back.
Usually "civilization" is reserved for signs of social organization like villages and developed crafts, like pottery and baskets. The differences in styles then define the civilizations, like the Indus Valley or Danube civilizations. Having a stone fort and scraper tools is just a camp that's hard to locate in time or human movement, hence an occupation.
Oh nooooooossssssss
The 'Native Americans' are going to be pissed. They'll probably sue so they can get their hands on the evidence and 'repatriate' it like they did the Kenniwick Man skeleton.
Add to that, The PNW is getting giant trolls. Both the story I posted above and the following link are both concurrently running on Oregonlive. https://www.oregonlive.com/living/2023/07/giant-troll-sculptures-coming-to-portland-and-five-other-secret-locations-in-the-pacific-northwest.html
We lived here far longer than that. Search Great Tartaria and Mudflood. 18,000 years ago, we were free from oppression, traveling the stars and knowing all that mortals could. Then Atlantis fell, and civilization was set back to square one, only with evil overlords instead of a beneficent and omnipresent Creator in public control. The pendulum will soon swing back.
Yes!
Usually "civilization" is reserved for signs of social organization like villages and developed crafts, like pottery and baskets. The differences in styles then define the civilizations, like the Indus Valley or Danube civilizations. Having a stone fort and scraper tools is just a camp that's hard to locate in time or human movement, hence an occupation.