Philo Sofee wrote:It's a win for fiction authors....
like l. ron hubbard
After establishing a career as a writer, becoming best known for his science fiction and fantasy stories...
and like joe smith the only difference is hubbard's scifi stories are lightyears better than Book of Mormon
Choyo Chagas is Chairman of the Big Four, the ruler of the planet from "The Bull's Hour" ( Russian: Час Быка), a social science fiction novel written by Soviet author and paleontologist Ivan Yefremov in 1968. Six months after its publication Soviet authorities banned the book and attempted to remove it from libraries and bookshops.
bomgeography wrote:But what I would like to hear from tapir and Maksutov and anybody else is if you would explain why people in temperate climates would migrate to the arctic Siberia.
The same reason why you would migrate to anywhere other than Hawaii.
"Finally, for your rather strange idea that miracles are somehow linked to the amount of gay sexual gratification that is taking place would require that primitive Christianity was launched by gay sex, would it not?"
bomgeography wrote:Tapir the hopewell civilization is not fake. Their artifacts are not fake the arch sites are not fake.
You can talk about the Michigan relics and the elephant effigies all you want.
But what you fail to realize is I said the Hopewell civilization Are the Nephites.
I have not failed to realize, I simply reject your fantasy. The people of the Hopewell civilization were not Nephites. You do not know who the American Indians really are and you are promoting a racist and degrading psuedo history about them. I will talk about the Michigan relics and elephant effigy pipes as long as you continue to pretend that they are from the Hopewell culture. Why don't you just stop using known hoax artifacts?
bomgeography wrote:Tapir I completely disagree with you.
It isn't just me that you disagree with David McKane. You disagree with the truth. And you will just keep on using the Michigan relics and elephant effigy pipes, objects that are known hoax artifacts.
Bummer, bomgeography. We (meaning intelligent human beings, in general) have found a site of human occupation that existed 24,000 years ago in the Yukon Territories. I guess those old guys and gals weren't all that bothered about moving to chilly climes.
About 24,000 years ago, when much of North America was buried under the ice of the Last Glacial Maximum, a few hunters took shelter in a small cave above the Bluefish River in what is now northwestern Yukon. The hunters had killed a Yukon horse and were butchering it using super-sharp stone shards called microblades. As they sliced out the horse’s meaty tongue, the microblades left distinctive cuts in its jaw bone. Millennia later, archaeologist and doctoral candidate Lauriane Bourgeon spotted those marks through her microscope at the University of Montreal and added the fragment of ancient jaw bone to her small selection of samples for radiocarbon dating.
Quasimodo wrote:Bummer, bomgeography. We (meaning intelligent human beings, in general) have found a site of human occupation that existed 24,000 years ago in the Yukon Territories. I guess those old guys and gals weren't all that bothered about moving to chilly climes.
About 24,000 years ago, when much of North America was buried under the ice of the Last Glacial Maximum, a few hunters took shelter in a small cave above the Bluefish River in what is now northwestern Yukon. The hunters had killed a Yukon horse and were butchering it using super-sharp stone shards called microblades. As they sliced out the horse’s meaty tongue, the microblades left distinctive cuts in its jaw bone. Millennia later, archaeologist and doctoral candidate Lauriane Bourgeon spotted those marks through her microscope at the University of Montreal and added the fragment of ancient jaw bone to her small selection of samples for radiocarbon dating.
Please read this very good article from a very reliable source with an open heart.
Thanks for the information Quasimodo. I hadn't seen that one yet and appreciated it. Your linked article also includes a link to the most recently published journal source, which supports the Beringia standstill that I mentioned earlier.
David McKane disregards radiocarbon dating when it proves him wrong and then demands that I prove that the Hopewell culture were not Nephites. It is simply impossible to get through to him.
bomgeography wrote:The Barren Bering Ice bridge Theory lacks genetic evidence for some Haplo groups, ever stepped foot in Siberia. Making a migration of hundreds to thousands of years impossible.
But what I would like to hear from tapir and Maksutov and anybody else is if you would explain why people in temperate climates would migrate to the arctic Siberia.
This is the type of wilderness that they would have to live in.
That is not the type of wilderness they would have migrated through, and there is still the possibility they could have come down the coast. People have lived in the arctic for tens of thousands of years. Their ancestors would have had to come from warmer more temperate climates. Maybe you could ask them why they did it.