Oldest Footprints in North America Officially Dated, and Big Archaeology Ain’t Gonna Like It
A debate plaguing the world of archaeology may have been settled Thursday, and it completely rewrites the human story of North America.
For decades, Big Archaeology has insisted humans only showed up in North America around 13,000 years ago. Despite mounting evidence this is not the case, the powers that be, the oligarchs of archaeology, have refused to admit they are wrong, essentially stunting the study of our past.
The issue all centers on a set of footprints in White Sands National Park, New Mexico. These fossilized steps of our ancient ancestors pre-date the Clovis people significantly and were previously dated to around 21,000 to 23,000 years ago, LiveScience explained. This means humans were hanging out in the U.S. as far back as the last ice age. Pretty cool, huh?
Scientists Uncover Oldest Known American Hunting Weapon @DailyCaller
Eat it, Clovis and Big Archeology https://t.co/01PYAWkVo2
— KAY SMYTHE (@KaySmythe) February 6, 2023
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