The Vikings discovered and settled in North America in 1021AD, or roughly 1,003 years ago. (we forgot to celebrate the 1,000th anniversary due to Covid).
Ancient Romans may have discovered North America. A Roman ship wreck off the Texas coast was discovered in 1886 that could be a late imperial merchant ship sunk along the Texas Coast in the Gulf of Mexico. It's not the only ancient Roman ship wreck in the Americas.
A Roman shipwreck was found in the waters off Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: thanks to its content, archaeologists were not only able to date the wreck to the mid-3rd century AD, but also to tell us with relative ease the ship came from ancient Zilis, on the Atlantic coast of modern day Morocco.
The History Channel, filming a documentary on Oak Island, south of Nova Scotia, archaeologists found another Roman shipwreck, along with a ceremonial sword, both dating from the 1st century AD. X ray analysis of the sword confirmed the materials used are compatible with those employed in Rome in that time period.
Similar swords were unearthed also in Europe: they all belonged to the period of Emperor Commodus and were given as a gift to particularly deserving gladiators and warriors.
In the past 200 years a number of coins dating from the 1st to the 4th century AD have been discovered in Kentucky (38), Tennessee (2), Massachusetts (about 10), as well as in other locations like North Carolina, Oklahoma and Georgia.
So... yeah... Christopher Columbus failed to "discover" that others "discovered" North America first.
It’s also alleged St Brendan also set foot on American soil.
There is a lot of info coming out that Columbus was a crypto jew, his main funders were jewish, so the whole racket at the time was about shekels, not discovery.
Then there's that whole thing where people were mining copper next to Lake Superior in effectively industrial amounts...and sending it...somehwere far away. I can't affix a screencap of some classic summaries of that, but there's been compelling work done on the transoceanic/transhemispheric trade in copper during the Bronze Age.
During the Bronze Age, 3500 to 1000 BC, five thousand copper mines were excavated on the south shore of Lake Superior. Millions of pounds of copper were extracted. Only a miniscule fraction of this copper can be accounted for among the artifacts of Native Americans.
So where did all of this copper go? Increasing evidence suggests that it went to Europe.
This is a frustrating topic to search on in lo these days of the massively censored and massaged internet. Unless you use massively honed search fu, and know what search terms to use, all you will ever find is a bunch of government agancy and academic garbage about how The First Coppersmiths In The New World Were Native Americans.
Christopher Columbus did NOT "discover" America.
The Vikings discovered and settled in North America in 1021AD, or roughly 1,003 years ago. (we forgot to celebrate the 1,000th anniversary due to Covid).
Ancient Romans may have discovered North America. A Roman ship wreck off the Texas coast was discovered in 1886 that could be a late imperial merchant ship sunk along the Texas Coast in the Gulf of Mexico. It's not the only ancient Roman ship wreck in the Americas.
A Roman shipwreck was found in the waters off Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: thanks to its content, archaeologists were not only able to date the wreck to the mid-3rd century AD, but also to tell us with relative ease the ship came from ancient Zilis, on the Atlantic coast of modern day Morocco.
The History Channel, filming a documentary on Oak Island, south of Nova Scotia, archaeologists found another Roman shipwreck, along with a ceremonial sword, both dating from the 1st century AD. X ray analysis of the sword confirmed the materials used are compatible with those employed in Rome in that time period.
Similar swords were unearthed also in Europe: they all belonged to the period of Emperor Commodus and were given as a gift to particularly deserving gladiators and warriors.
In the past 200 years a number of coins dating from the 1st to the 4th century AD have been discovered in Kentucky (38), Tennessee (2), Massachusetts (about 10), as well as in other locations like North Carolina, Oklahoma and Georgia.
So... yeah... Christopher Columbus failed to "discover" that others "discovered" North America first.
It’s also alleged St Brendan also set foot on American soil.
There is a lot of info coming out that Columbus was a crypto jew, his main funders were jewish, so the whole racket at the time was about shekels, not discovery.
Crypto jew? He just might have been:
https://x.com/qumranqu/status/1845472773751128428
Blockchain Jew 😆 … sorry
Then there's that whole thing where people were mining copper next to Lake Superior in effectively industrial amounts...and sending it...somehwere far away. I can't affix a screencap of some classic summaries of that, but there's been compelling work done on the transoceanic/transhemispheric trade in copper during the Bronze Age.
https://chapelboro.com/town-square/columns/common-science/bronze-age-part-ii-the-case-of-the-missing-copper
https://archive.is/XgIec
The deleted Part 1, linked in that text, is here archived:
https://archive.is/iRSop
This is a frustrating topic to search on in lo these days of the massively censored and massaged internet. Unless you use massively honed search fu, and know what search terms to use, all you will ever find is a bunch of government agancy and academic garbage about how The First Coppersmiths In The New World Were Native Americans.
Their is evidence of large scale coper mining on Isle Royal in lake superior. But their is no evidence any of the American tribes ever used copper.
Someone mined a shitload of copper several thousand years ago.
Minnesota Vikings are a psyop.
Don't forget Olmecs, Mayans Aztecs & Canaanites. The descendants of Ham & Japheth.
Excellent!!!