Posted: Tue Oct 24, 2006 10:23 am
Sure enough, Mike Waters, from Texas A&M, tries to cast doubt on Cynthia Irwin-Williams work.
It's what they do, Charlie.......<sigh>.
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Sure enough, Mike Waters, from Texas A&M, tries to cast doubt on Cynthia Irwin-Williams work.
Of course - it comes close to being a Newtonian law. But this seems to me to be going well so far. Of course, some folks may just getting organized for a big giant poo-poo on the study.Of course not....the status quo always clings to power!
Sounds like "Tales from the Crypt". I've got to check this one out. Thanks Sam.Sam Salmon wrote:Without directly addressing the notion of 'The Club' an intriguing and sometimes fascinating study of some the struggles around Pre Clovis can be found in the book Bones by Elaine Dewar
http://www.randomhouse.ca/catalog/displ ... 0679311546
I agree. Darn interesting in the meantime...I'll, obviously, be watching this one closely.Realistically, there is no way that these new studies will just get published, meet with polite applause, and the textbooks get rewritten. Not without some sort of challenge. It's good news I think that a team is going down to Mexico to re-examine the area at the first opportunity.
This is going to take a while.
Wouldn't doubt it a bit, beag. Only thing, though, is Sam's 2 reports passed through all his colleagues in peer review before being accepted into the journals. As specialized as this research is, the only ones qualified to "poo-poo" on his research are the very ones that accepted it...guess we'll stayed tuned.Of course - it comes close to being a Newtonian law. But this seems to me to be going well so far. Of course, some folks may just getting organized for a big giant poo-poo on the study.
Bruce - I'm not a hunter, but congratulations on the Bull Elk. Hurry back, there's exciting stuff going on here also.Bruce wrote:http://www.d.umn.edu/cla/faculty/troufs ... cine_chart
Just got off the mountain with my first bull elk.
Min,
the 300 win mag dropped him at 450 yards.
Charlie,
that's the longest 3 backbacking trips i've ever made!
Marduk,
wish you were there
Beagle,
looks like their starting to work 100,000 of years. these guys fit my 7mil.
OAS,
We need to monitor all the burb's before we start worrying about some guy collecting stuff out in the desert.
Back to fill my cow tag. Check in on the 30th.
I have heard of two micropaleontologists who have looked at it and say it is 'quite flawed'. I'm sure everyone here knows that peer review doesn't guarantee accuracy.Beagle wrote:Well, as stated above, there will probably be some organized opposition in the future. I've noticed on the internet already some negative posting about Sams' finding - these from sophisticated non-experts.
So I still believe his paper will have to be defended against actual expert scrutiny.
At least I haven't seen any personal attacks on him.......so far. We all know how this goes though.
How do they say the study is flawed? It's good to hear two sides of an issue.I have heard of two micropaleontologists who have looked at it and say it is 'quite flawed'. I'm sure everyone here knows that peer review doesn't guarantee accuracy.
MEXICO CITY - A trail of 13 fossilized footprints running through a valley in a desert in northern Mexico could be among the oldest in the Americas, Mexican archeologists said.
The footprints were made by hunter gatherers who are believed to have lived thousands of years ago in the Coahuila valley of Cuatro Cienegas, 190 miles (306 kms) south of Eagle Pass, Texas, said archaeologist Yuri de la Rosa Gutierrez of Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History.
"We believe (the footprints) are between 10,000 and 15,000 years old," De la Rosa said in a news release Wednesday. "We have evidence of the presence of hunter gatherers in the Coahuila desert more than 10,000 years ago."
well that was a blatant lie then wasn't itI took the liberty of telling her that the members of Archaeologica were following the latest developements with keen interest and excitement.
AND - that's a sight better than she got regarding another forum.Beagle wrote:VSMs website has expanded a little and is attracting some attention. I took the liberty of telling her that the members of Archaeologica were following the latest developements with keen interest and excitement.