OK, so let's tweak:Frank Harrist wrote:6000 years is a little tough to overcome. I still like your theory, though it may need a little tweeking.
I'll give serious consideration to a theory if it is seriously presented to me: with arguments, links and references.Frank Harrist wrote:Perhaps "benefit of the doubt" was the wrong way to put it. Maybe I should have said "serious consideration", instead.
No, you hadn't, afaik.Frank Harrist wrote:I might point out that , also that there is a temporal discrepency with your theory. I thought I had posted this before:
Ah! So I wasn't the first to propose this. I already thought that unlikely. Thanks for putting me straight here.Frank Harrist wrote:"The general claim that Solutrean folks came across the north Atlantic in hide boats is a hypothesis put forth by Dennis Stanford and Bruce Bradley.
But there is a major difference with my theory: I think the Solutreans WALKED to America. Across the ice.
I think the 6.000 year gap may be partly explained by the duration of the long trek across the Atlantic, across the ice. It wouldn't surprise me if that trek took at least centuries. Maybe even millennia. (How long have the Inuit already lived on the ice...?). Why so long? Could be because the solutreans weren't really trekking. They had no destination: they didn't know there was a land on the other side. So they weren't intentionally going there. They weren't going anywhere, really. I submit they simply lived on the ice. Like the Inuit. And one day, by pure accident, discovered the American landmass.Frank Harrist wrote:Their claims are based largely on similarities in lithic technology between Pre-Clovis and Clovis materials from the New World and Solutrean in the Old World. * The problem with these claims is that most of the best comparisons are between Solutrean and Clovis, and they are separated by at least 6000 years in time as well the difference in location.* The quantity of Pre-Clovis materials from the Eastern U.S. is sparce at best and roughly compares to Solutrean in that they had blades and lanceolate points. Comparative technology is not the best way to demonstrate connections since there are only a limited number of ways to flake stone tools. Similar techniques were independently developed or rediscovered by different groups in different periods. For example, prismatic blades were made by both Clovis and Hopewell groups, but they are separated by 9000-10000 years with folks not making those things. Hopewell developed blade technology without contact with Paleoindians. Thus, take such comparisons with some skepticism, especially when there is no direct developmental link in the areas where they were found. Temporal separation negates most of these claims. As for the generalized comparisons of Solutrean with Clovis, etc., Lawrence Strauss (a Solutrean specialist) pretty well destroyed those arguments in an article:
Straus, Lawrence Guy
2000 Solutrean Settlement of North America? A Review of Reality.
American Antiquity 65(2):219-226.
What 'additional examinations'?Frank Harrist wrote:"Finally, the claim that Kennewick is Caucasian is simply BS. That was a mistaken claim based on a statement by Chatters when he was first studying the remains. However, additional examinations indicate Kennewick (and other early remains) are most closely related to Asian populations like the Ainu and early generalized Asian groups."
Afaik, only last fall the Kennewick remains were ordered by a judge to be made available for such examination. I am not aware that they 1) have actually been turned over since then to scientists by the indians, or 2) that such examinations have been concluded and publicly reported on. Or do you know something I don't?