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| For teaching
  purposes only; do not review, quote or abstract. A Public Information Service of
  suspected Pre-Columbian Old World contacts in America   | 
 
| ETHNIC DIVERSITY IN AMERICA BEFORE COLUMBUS SUGGESTS PREHISTORIC OLD WORLD CONTACTS(Contacts)                                                                                                            Please CLICK on underlined categories and photos for more detail:   Archeologists and anthropologists have long suspected
  that peoples of the Old World had made contact with the Americas many
  centuries before Columbus (Hristov & Genoves 1999).  The human figures sculptured in stone and
  pottery, found at archeological sites spanning great distances in America,
  reveal    Some archeologists have gone the extreme to
  explain away the African influence in particular. 
  For example, Coe & Diehl (1980), referring    The Olmec is one of the earliest known American
  civilizations that began in Southern Mexico around 2,000 B.C.  The name in Aztec Nahuatl means  "People of the Land of
  Rubber."  Ethnically and
  culturally they exhibited African and Asian influences
  (Example
  #1, #2).  These
  people were concerned about their identity to the extent that they devoted
  considerable resources to document their presence through the construction of
  gigantic monuments, the quality of which demanded    A close examination of the sculptures and other
  artwork after ca. 950 B.C. shows continuing, but diminishing Olmec influence,
  which was accompanied by periodic massive destruction of their
  monuments.  Many of the largest
  sculptures sustained mutilation on a massive scale, in an effort that must
  have almost equaled that of their creation. 
  It has been implied that this may have been a ritual at the death of
  an old ruler, or caused by outside invaders. 
  Beginning around 200 B.C., there appears to have been a long period of
  integration with the Eurasian peoples moving in from the north and
  elsewhere.  Around this time the
  quality of the human rendition in ceramics became especially advanced,
  sometimes equaling anything being produced today (e.g., Figs. et27, 54, 55, 63 & 66).  The
  legend of the “god” Quetzalcoatl suggests that he possessed possible African
  ancestry (Fig. 182),
  and he left the area sometime after 500 AD. 
  Could there have been a return of some of the Olmec back to Africa
  back then?  Certainly, the Olmec
  culture diminished its influence in the humid lowlands of southern Mexico after
  the 1st Century AD.  Speculations on
  the reason for this have included a widespread outbreak of malaria (origins
  in Africa) and aggressive invaders from the north.  However, the African presence is maintained in Mesoamerica
  through Aztec times in the 15th Century, implying repeated contacts,
  accidental or otherwise, with the African continent.   Another argument against the Pre-Columbian
  colonization of America by people from the Old World implies the independent
  development of "identical" European, African and Asian ethnic types
  in both hemispheres, which is not easy to imagine.  Anthropologists continue to revise estimates when true humans, Homo sapiens, first began to leave
  Africa. Larick & Ciochon (1996) judged this to be around 80,000 B.C.  More recent estimates point to between
  100,000 and 125,000 BC.  But, their
  existence on the African continent extends much further back in time (see 700,000 BP, and Diamond).  They
  had evolved independently with a close relative, Homo erectus, which left central Africa around l.5 million
  B.C., and spread to all parts of the world with the possible exception of
  America (Leakey 1995).  However, the
  Calico site in California has already been suspected as a possible Homo erectus site (see Early Humans), and a recent discovery in Kansas of a
  footprint with an opposed big toe points to the possibility of even earlier
  species (see Kansas). 
  Analyses of the DNA in mitochondria and the Y chromosome support the
  theory that Homo sapiens left
  Africa in two small groups through present day Yemen and spread to other parts
  of the world after 80,000 B.C. 
  Various races of humans developed in the different geographic regions
  of the world from wherever Homo sapiens
  settled down.  It took a long time for
  this to occur to the degree that our major races differ today.  A conservative estimate for the
  differences between some Asian, African and European ethnic groups would be
  at least 20,000 years.  As Africa was
  the point of origin of Homo sapiens,
  it would make ethnic groups in Africa the most ancient, with a period of
  development probably exceeding 200,000 years (Please see James
  Shreeve for detailed account).  In
  America, the accepted dates for the earliest presence of humans range from
  15,000 B.C to 40,000 B.C., although earlier dates are suspected and
  eventually could be found (see Savannah).   There is increasing evidence that initial migrations to America were
  along coastal ice sheets that joined America with the Old World prior to
  15,000 B.C. For example, the technology for producing Clovis projectiles
  developed in southwestern Europe. 
  Land bridge migrations of Homo
  sapiens to America began between Siberia and Alaska around 15,000
  B.C., and much later migration routes from Europe, Africa and Asia varied.  Some ideas hold that humans sailed west,
  across the Atlantic, in boats, beginning probably after 4,000 B.C.  Certainly, the islands of Hawaii were
  first colonized from the north (e.g., Alaska & Siberia) [see Hawaii History]. 
  Another suggestion is that they arrived first on the Pacific coast to
  the State of Guerrero, Mexico. 
  Indeed, the Polynesian chicken existed in South America prior to the arrival
  of Europeans in the 16th Century 
  (see Chickens), most likely transported
  there by Polynesians who then brought back home sweet potatoes and the bottle
  gourd. Huyghe (1992) pointed out that some Africans, for example, utilized
  large vessels capable of carrying many tons, in their trading activities
  around the Indian Ocean.   There was
  also extensive sailing activity by the Phoenicians and Romans up and down the
  coasts of Europe and Africa; and at least one ancient wreck has been
  discovered off the coast of Brazil (Fig. 76, Marx 1992). 
  It is imaginable that occasionally some of the vessels, with variable
  ethnic groups on board, may have gotten off their course during storms, and
  landed in America.  Bailey (1994)
  advanced the possibility of early quests for raw materials, such as tin and
  copper, in America by seafaring European people during the Bronze Age
  (6,000-1,190 B.C.) [Also see Bronze]. 
  The possibility that Egypt might have had intense contact with North
  America is supported by the discovery in 1950 of large boats adjacent to
  Khufu’s great pyramid.  They were
  buried between 2589 and 2566 B.C.  One
  has been restored and it shows considerable wear as if it had been on long
  journeys.  Its length is 43.63 meters,
  width 5.66 meters (see Egyptian Boat).  The absence of bronze tools among the
  artifacts found in America has not been explained and this argues against
  contacts with the Old World during the Bronze Age (Please see Bronze
  Age Tools).  There
  is historical evidence for a large seafaring trade in reindeer hides by
  people from the Mediterranean area (see Sea Peoples). 
  Edo Nyland has reviewed the information available and concluded that
  Pre-Columbian voyages, especially from the Mediterranean Region, were almost
  a certainty (see Human
  Migrations).  Extraordinary finds of ancient Asiatic
  and Middle Eastern writing and sculpture are being found in the Lake Titicaca
  region of western South America by Bernardo Biados and a team of
  archeologists (see Biados).    The European and Asian faces in sculpture and artifacts appearing
  intermittently after 2,000 B.C. show a trend for the former to be more
  numerous in colder and drier areas, and the latter in the humid tropical
  lowlands.  The possibility of contact
  by people from southern and central Asia in Pre-Columbian America has been
  advanced (Carter 1964, 1976; Ekholm 1946, 1953, 1964, Estrada et al. 1962, Heine-Geldern 1954, 1959;
  Jairazbhoy 1976, Phillips 1966, Shao 1976, Smith 1915).  In the History
  of the Liang Dynasty, published in China ca. 629 AD, there is
  mention of a voyage around 499 AD to a country that was very likely America
  (Shao 1976).  The actual place was
  described as "The Country of the Extreme East."  Shao (1976) also showed many photographs
  of statues and temple art of Mesoamerica that bear a very close resemblance
  to similar early art of China and India. 
  In particular, the depiction of elephants on some of the early Mayan
  temples has always been a mystery (Figs. 128, 131 & 133). 
  Although people in Southern Mexico had hunted mammoths in 8,000 B.C.
  (Coe 1994), they were extinct long before development of the Maya
  civilization.  The art styles found in
  Honduras especially resemble those of early India and southern China.  Many of these associations were already
  noted by Vining (1885). People have attributed the finding of Japanese type
  pottery in coastal Ecuador from ca. 3,000 B.C. to early contact there
  possibly from Japan sailing down with the coastal currents in small boats
  (Jairazbhoy 1976, Meggers 1992, Meggers & Evans 1966).  Coe (1994) noted a similarity between the
  architecture at El Tajín, Mexico and Bronze and Iron Age cultures of China.                    The apparent discovery of the
  American drugs cocaine and tobacco in Egyptian mummies has been discussed at
  length by S. A. Wells (see Mummy).                    There has been an
  especially interesting probable Norse connection in North America by 1,700
  B.C., as revealed in pictographs and petroglyphs (Figs. 11, 15, & 19) (Fell 1982).  Some
  Norse settlements even appear to have developed to the level of herding
  bighorn sheep (Fig. 20) (see Attachment
  #1).  An
  advanced form of weaving may also have been brought to America by these
  explorers who were in search of copper (Bronze Figs. 158, 159, 161). Legends are widespread in Polynesia of
  contacts with white people (see Polynesia). 
  Other unanswered questions include why are there so many Japanese
  words and phrases in the Zuni language of New Mexico and Arizona, and why
  does the native Purepecha language in the State of Michoacán, Mexico bear
  little resemblance to Nahuatl, the primary indigenous language root in
  Mesoamerica?  Furthermore, the
  existence of a widespread universal language in pre-Christian times, the West African Language, provides clues to Pre-Columbian voyages
  throughout the world.  Linguistics Archeology
  that studies the
  relationships of modern languages to the ancient West African Language is
  giving us greater insight into people’s migrations.  Some more recent sailings to America by Europeans after 700
  A.D. seem to have occurred (see Great Ireland and West
  Virginia Petroglyph).     The presence of cultivated plants also sometimes
  suggests pre-Columbian contact with Asia and Africa, although caution is
  advised before making definite comparisons (see <Plants>).  For example, Spanish friars reported that the Maya in Yucatan
  were growing both yams and sweet potatoes at the time of the Spanish conquest
  (Landa 1556).  However, the genus of
  yams, Dioscorea, occurs as
  separate species in America, Asia and Africa. The botanist, Galletty Wilson
  maintained that tobacco, a native American plant, was in
  use across Africa long before the arrival of Portuguese traders; and the
  American sweet potato was thought to be cultivated in Uganda before the time
  of Columbus (Bailey 1994).  Bernal
  (1973) remarked that the American peanut was probably cultivated in China by
  3,000 B.C.  Pompeian murals have been
  reported to contain accurate portrayals of two tropical American plants, the
  pineapple and the sour sop, Annona
  squamosa (Neugebauer 1962).    American cultivated
  cottons are tetraploid, with one set of genes resembling
  the genes of American wild cottons, and the other set that of all Asiatic
  cottons (Bailey 1994, Brücher 1989). 
  Human intervention would be essential to explain this
  relationship.  Tetraploid cotton was
  being used in Peru in 4,000 B.C.!   The American sweet potato, Ipomoea batatas, is
  especially interesting, because many varieties of it were being grown in
  Polynesia long before European contact there (Brücher).  Its name in Polynesia and in America is
  close to  "kumar" or
  "camote," which comes from the Sanskrit word "kumari"
  (Bailey 1994).  The coconut, believed
  to be from Southeast Asia, is thought by some to have been present in America
  when the Spaniards arrived.  Coconuts
  cannot remain viable after floating for a long time in seawater.              The bottle gourd, Lagenaria
  siceraria, is a container plant of African origin.  Its earliest occurrence in America was in
  the Ayacucho Basin of Peru ca. 11,000 B.C. (Lathrop 1977).  It was grown throughout America as long
  ago as 7,000 B.C.  Although it was
  believed spread by ocean currents, its seeds cannot remain viable for the
  length of time that floating to America would take.  Brücher (1989) puzzled at how this plant crossed to the Pacific
  side of America at such an early date. 
  The Arabs may have brought American maize into
  Spain in the 13th Century (Bailey 1994). 
  Bailey (1994) suggests other interesting plant examples.             Some of the more
  readily available Pre-Columbian sculptures and figures found in the Americas
  are shown in the following links. 
  These are arranged chronologically as Preclassic (1800 B.C. - 150 AD), Classic (150 AD - 900 AD), and Post-Classic (900 AD - 1521 AD).  They show the multiethnic characteristics that at various times
  have exerted an influence in America, and some of the marvelous artwork
  associated with the various cultures. 
  They are represented as closely as possible to the original works, and
  their dates are derived primarily from the respective cited references, which
  should be consulted for detail. Von Wuthenau (1969) emphasized that the
  individual and ethnic characteristics of the human face are something that no
  one could invent by accident. 
  Moreover, with the most elementary logic and to all artistic
  experience an Amerindian could not depict in a masterly way the head of an
  African, Asian or European without missing a single characteristic, unless he
  had actually seen such a person.               The wide scale
  destruction of historical documents in America by the Aztecs, who strove to
  rewrite history in their own image, and by European invaders after the
  Conquest, has contributed to our present limited knowledge of Pre-Columbian
  history in America.  Foreign diseases,
  such as smallpox, measles and whooping cough, decimated the native
  populations in Mexico alone by an estimated 86% by 1700 AD (Coe 1994).  Certainly, such high mortality contributed
  to a great reduction of ethnic diversity in America.    Continuing to ignore the many authors
  cited herein who have painstakingly strived to record remnants of this
  history is unconscionable in view of the fact that their evidence for
  Pre-Columbian contact is strong. 
  Recovered artifacts are scattered in museums and private collections
  around the world where they are not always generally accessible.  The chronological assemblage herein of
  some of the evidence for Pre-Columbian contacts in America should stimulate
  additional searches and a broader discussion of the subject.  This in turn may lead to new perspectives
  in our knowledge of ethno-historical events and human population migrations.
  [Also see Album]     -------------------------------------------------------------------------------   Attachment #1     (FURTHER DETAIL)             As of January
  2009 there have been few implements found in the Americas that date from the
  Bronze Age.  (Please see Discussion) Nevertheless, Fell (1982) noted that several outstanding
  facts become increasingly apparent from various epigraphic expeditions.  He stated, "One is that we have
  greatly underrated the achievements of the Bronze Age peoples of northern
  Europe.  We have long known, from
  their conspicuous carvings that constitute the rock art of the Bronze Age,
  that the North Sea and the Baltic were the home waters of fleets of
  ships.  What we have failed to realize
  is that those same ships and characteristic Bronze Age style, are also
  depicted on the rocks and cliffs of the maritime regions of eastern North
  America.  And now it is also apparent
  that these same matching petroglyphs, on both sides of the Atlantic, are also
  accompanied by readable texts cut in ancient scripts that are likewise found
  on either side of the Atlantic," (Also see Colonization). The voyages occurred just as the Iron Age was beginning,
  so that the explorers might have brought with them implements of iron instead
  of bronze (see Picture), and most would have probably rusted away.             What this means,
  of course, is that the ancient shipwrights made sound vessels, whose skippers
  and crews sailed them across the ocean, thereby fulfilling their builders'
  dreams.  Flotillas of ancient Norse, Baltic,
  and Nordic (often erroneously referred to as Celtic—see Celts) ships each summer set their prows to the northwest, to
  cross the Atlantic, to return later in the season with cargoes of raw
  materials furnished by the Algonquians with whom they traded.  To make these crossings they depended in
  part upon the sea roads that had been opened up by the amelioration of the
  climate at the peak of the Bronze Age. [See Climate]  As oceanographers
  have inferred, the polar ice melted then, and the favorable westward-flowing
  air and water currents generated by the permanent polar high now became
  available to aid in the westward passage. 
  The return voyage, as always, could be made on the west wind drift, in
  the latitude of around 40-deg. North Latitude, as Columbus rediscovered.  While these Norse traders opened up the
  northern parts of North America, other sailors from the Mediterranean lands
  were doing similar things... but their outward voyage lay along the path that
  Columbus employed, utilizing the westward-blowing trade winds, found at
  latitudes below 30-deg. N.  Both sets
  of navigation, though employing different outward routes, were obliged to use
  the same homeward track, that of the west wind drift in middle
  latitudes.  Along this common sea road
  the sailors of the two different regions would occasionally meet, thus
  prompting intercultural exchanges between the Baltic lands and North Africa,
  as Fell (1982) had inferred previously.            
  At least twice since the close of the Stone Age, conditions have
  favored such events.  The first
  occurred during the warm period of the middle Bronze Age.  Then the world's climates cooled again,
  and the northern route to America became too ice-bound and too dangerous to
  attract adventurers in that direction any longer  [see Climate].  It remained thus
  until about AD 700, when once more the earth's climate ameliorated.  Once again the northern icecap melted and
  the polar seas could support navigation that made use of the polar high.  Once more mariners came to northeastern
  America, this time under a name by which they are known in history--The
  Vikings.  Yet, as the inscriptions
  show, these Vikings were not just Norsemen, they included as before men from
  the Baltic lands, Lithuanians and Latvians, as well as peoples from Ireland
  and probably also Wales.  After AD
  1,200 the earth grew colder again, the thousand vineyards of William the
  Conqueror's England died out, and Normans turned their attention to the south
  of Europe to bring in their Malmsey wines, no longer fermented in England,
  where no vineyards now survived.  The
  old routes to America were deserted, and that western land lay ignored by
  Europe until the voyage of Columbus once more awakened the cupidity of
  monarchs who, by this time, now controlled large populations of Europe.  This time the full force of European
  exploitation fell upon the Amerindians, and the age of American isolation had
  ended.             Another noteworthy
  fact is that the ancient Europeans were not barbarians.  They not only spoke in the chief dialects
  of the Indo-European tongues, but already by late Neolithic times, the
  Europeans could write.  The languages they wrote now prove to have
  been comprehensible to us as representing the principal tongues of modern
  Europe:  Teutonic, Baltic, Celtic, and
  Basque.  Yet, another surprising
  discovery is due to Professor Linus Brunner, who announced in 1981 the
  occurrence of Semitic vocabulary in the newly identified Rhaetic language of ancient Switzerland.             The heretofore
  mysterious people, to whom the archeologists have attached such names as
  'Beaker Folk,' 'Bell-beaker People,' and so on, now prove to be Europeans of
  presently existing stocks.  They spoke
  in early variant forms of languages that we can see as related closely to the
  classical Teutonic, Norse, and other tongues of Europe at the time of the Romans.  The inscriptions found on their artifacts
  prove this.  That it was not
  understood before is simply because archeologists have mistaken the writing
  for decorative engraving.  When a loom
  weight has inscribed upon it the word warp,
  it is obvious that this is a purely practical identification label for a
  weaver.  Decorative it may be, but let
  us not overlook the fact that such a label tells us immediately the
  linguistic stock of the person who engraved it.  Moreover, of course, it certifies that the engraver belonged to
  a literate society.  The Pre-Christian
  languages that were spoken were apparently all very closely related to a most
  ancient form, West African (see Migrations for a more extensive treatment of this subject).  The Basque Language apparently survives as
  a close approximation of ancient West African.             When we examine the rock and cliff
  inscriptions of Scandinavia, we discover that the 'meaningless' decorations
  beside their ship carvings are none other than a readable comment in Baltic
  speech.  They are appropriate to the
  scene depicted, and we know at once that the designer was familiar with the
  language spoken by the ancestors of the people who still live along the
  Baltic coasts today.  They were known
  as Balts.  Let us recognize this simple fact, and
  call them by their proper names.  In
  addition, when we find very similar, and similarly lettered, engravings on
  North American rocks, it is our obligation to recognize their European origins,
  and to call them by their proper names too.   -----------------------   Please
  see Bibliography for citations noted in
  this section   |