People in the Americas Before the Last Ice Age Glaciation Concluded: An Emerging Western Hemisphere Population Origin Paradigm
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People in the Americas before the Last Ice Age Glaciation Concluded: An Emerging Paradigm on Western Hemisphere Population Origin covers the turn of the century emerging science on the origin of human population in the western hemisphere. It is a booklet that is designed to provide a reference bridge until the new information can be included in textbook presentations. With the ability to examine DNA evidence on extremely old human remains and findings at greater depth than formerly considered, information grows at a rapid rate. The science is in its infancy, but surprising finds occur moment by moment.
Bonnye Matthews
Bonnye Matthews, prolific Alaskan author, writes prehistoric fiction. According to Grace Cavalieri, award-winning poet/playwright, book reviewer, and host of The Poet and the Poem from the Library of Congress, Matthews is America's pre-eminent author of prehistoric fiction. According to George F. Steiner, Quaternary Geology and Pleistocene Cognitive Archaeology expert, “Her stories are fascinating and the science behind them is cutting edge.” The novel series focus is primarily the pre-ice age peopling of the Americas, and the novella series continues the same focus with a view of very old individual archaeological sites. There is a brief non-fictional accompaniment regarding her emerging western hemisphere population origin paradigm.
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People in the Americas Before the Last Ice Age Glaciation Concluded - Bonnye Matthews
People in the AMERICAS
before the Last Ice Age Glaciation Concluded
An Emerging Western Hemisphere Population Origin Paradigm
Bonnye Matthews
Award Winning Writer of Prehistoric Fiction
PO Box 221974 Anchorage, Alaska 99522-1974
books@publicationconsultants.com—www.publicationconsultants.com
ISBN 978-1-59433-735-2
eBook ISBN 978-1-59433-736-9
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2017952410
Copyright 2017 Bonnye Matthews
—First Edition—
A must have introduction to the emerging Peopling of the Americas Paradigm.
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in any form, or by any mechanical or electronic means including photocopying or recording, or by any information storage or retrieval system, in whole or in part in any form, and in any case not without the written permission of the author and publisher.
Manufactured in the United States of America.
Table of Contents
People in the Americas before the Last Ice Age Glaciation Concluded
Søren Kierkegaard
Albert Einstein
Clovis-First Paradigm
Clovis-First Paradigm—Step 1
Fray José de Acosta
Clovis
Clovis-First Paradigm—Step 2
Clovis-First Paradigm—Step 3
Ice-Free Corridor Debunked
Peopling of the Americas Paradigm
The Stories
Boats and Brains
Could we learn from Neanderthals?
DNA and Species?
Sources of People in the Americas
Valsequillo and Pedra Furada
Valsequillo
Pedra Furada
Valsequillo and Pedra Furada Novellas
Other Books by Bonnye Matthews
Winds of Change novel series
Non-Fiction
Bibliography
People in the Americas before the Last Ice Age Glaciation Concluded
Could people have been living in North and South America before the Ice Age? As far back as 250,000 years ago or even farther back? Could this so-called New World actually contain cave art that dated back to 30,000 years ago or longer? Could we have cave art in the Americas equivalent to that of Europe?
Søren Kierkegaard
A philosopher named Søren Kierkegaard once said,
Life can only be understood backwards, but it must be lived forwards.
We study it backwards to help us make better informed choices for the future. Archaeologists, anthropologists, historians, and others work to provide understanding of human life in the past. It’s hard, and much of it relies on speculation.
The scientific method contains the provision that scientists are to expect, in fact even welcome, findings of error in their data. That’s one way science improves.
Sometimes things get in the way of good science. People have come to tie their reputations to what they consider theories, which in reality are paradigms or hypotheses at best, strange opinions or fantasies at worst. If those people are in positions of power they can create serious problems for the pursuit of knowledge and fact. Who, for example, would want to travel to the moon, if a powerful scientist plotting the track made everyone follow his ideas right or wrong—and his data were known to contain errors? The rigor of science is hard to attain in fields where people speculate to explain how things might have been, harder still when ego or power are factors