Sujet : Re: Brideshead and paleo anthropology revisited
De : jtem01 (at) *nospam* gmail.com (JTEM)
Groupes : sci.anthropology.paleoDate : 12. Sep 2024, 02:03:28
Autres entêtes
Organisation : Eek
Message-ID : <vbtel0$3svl2$2@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
Mario Petrinovic wrote:
I think that it should be the case that Atlantic Ocean is far wider than the Wallace line, but it actually isn't? Are you crazy? Are you narcissist?
What you think isn't relevant. Monkeys are found on both sides
of the Atlantic. They are not found on the other side of the
Wallace Line.
So no matter what you want to argue, the crossing was made in
the Atlantic.
Honey, look at a map. You just follow the coast.
Cherry pie, page 35, just a little read, direct route over open sea from Brittany to NW Iberia, 10 - 12 days, Bronze Age.
And very few if any would ever do that.
Open sea and get caught in a storm? Death. Hugging the coast and a
storm brews up? Beach yourself and wait it out.
Just look at the map. They had zero incentive to do anything but
sail within sight of the coast.
-- https://jtem.tumblr.com/tagged/The%20Book%20of%20JTEM/page/5