You read that correctly - 130,000 year old sea travel in the Mediterranean. Story at the guardian.co.uk.
AP foreign, Monday January 3 2011
ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Archaeologists on the island of Crete have discovered what may be evidence of one of the world's first sea voyages by human ancestors, the Greek Culture Ministry said Monday. [How can they be so sure this was a journey by "human ancestors?" How do they know they have their dating right? How do they know the accepted chronology of "evolution" is correct, for that matter - ah, but that's an argument for somewhere else. If memory serves me correctly, so-called "modern" man appeared on the scene about 100,000 years ago. But what if "modern" man is older than previously thought? What if the entire chronology is flawed because we have so much information missing? Just a thought --]
A ministry statement said experts from Greece and the U.S. have found rough axes and other tools thought to be between 130,000 and 700,000 years old close to shelters on the island's south coast.
Crete has been separated from the mainland for about five million years, so whoever made the tools must have traveled there by sea (a distance of at least 40 miles). That would upset the current view that human ancestors migrated to Europe from Africa by land alone.
"The results of the survey not only provide evidence of sea voyages in the Mediterranean tens of thousands of years earlier than we were aware of so far, but also change our understanding of early hominids' cognitive abilities," the ministry statement said.
The previous earliest evidence of open-sea travel in Greece dates back 11,000 years (worldwide, about 60,000 years — although considerably earlier dates have been proposed).
The tools were found during a survey of caves and rock shelters near the village of Plakias by archaeologists from the American School of Classical Studies at Athens and the Culture Ministry.
Such rough stone implements are associated with Heidelberg Man and Homo Erectus, extinct precursors of the modern human race, which evolved from Africa about 200,000 years ago.
"Up to now we had no proof of Early Stone Age presence on Crete," said senior ministry archaeologist Maria Vlazaki, who was not involved in the survey. She said it was unclear where the hominids had sailed from, or whether the settlements were permanent.
"They may have come from Africa or from the east," she said. "Future study should help."
The team of archaeologists has applied for permission to conduct a more thorough excavation of the area, which Greek authorities are expected to approve later this year.
...calli/acalli(N)=house/water house.
ReplyDeleteNomads become sailors is the import
of the above combo of Nauatl words.
all the tech is there(in pieces).
one of our oldest verbs from the
mediterranean=ma(N/verb)=to hunt land/
sea with net. how about Neander as
boatman?
ah, chipeua(N)=chi-pe-ua=
on top/chi-pe/be-gin ua/owns, yes,
the real etymology for the joking
Chippewa(Amerind tribe=tribu=
tepullu=male member).
ah,
chipeua(N)=instruction how to dress
a log canoe/canoa(sp)=calli no atl=
house our water=chip(E/verb)=c/ship.
a chipper ship slipper clipper ship.
s(l)ipper(E)=sip/Cipactli(N/Tona)=
(s)c(r)ipt, a s(l)ipper of.
Nomads, Mazyectli(N)=peoples of
North Africa in Upper stone age
Deertime, Mazyectlalli(N)=excello
deerland=name of North African
corridor stretching to mideast,=
Yectlalli(N)=goodland=Yizr/l/tlalli
(letra)=Israel. where the Phoenicians
came from, homeboys, began Egypt.
Mazeltov!=Mazatl toptli(N)=deer idol.