Comments by "LRRPFco52" (@LRRPFco52) on "JRE Clips" channel.

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  14.  @cchrizzy219  As I have studied indigenous peoples of North America for decades, the history becomes more complex. We have the ancient Adena and Hopewell peoples of the Eastern Woodland and Mississippi regions, who I believe came from the Middle East at different times by boat. Adena date back to right after the Tower of Babel, so they weren't walking that far. Hopewell arrived near Florida/Georgia when the Mississippi Delta was more like a huge bay area in a post-glacial period of significant water bodies in North America that have since subsided. We have very detailed geological records of the Mississippi though, due to sedentary fluctuations like a snake, leaving deposits in a pattern that acts as a calendar. The Adena and Hopewell built a lot of structures with orientation to the stars. The vast river network promoted fast travel and trade, with lots of copper, furs, timber, and fairly advanced workmanship in goods. They were far more advanced than most historians give them credit. There are baptismal fonts with the water still running in a hidden subterranean temple in the hills of Pennsylvania, for example. Pyramids in Illinois at Cahokia Mounds, Jewish structures that pre-date European exploration, Ten Commandments inscribed on a boulder in New Mexico pre-Columbus, the Bat Creek Stone with ancient Phonecian/Hebrew inscribed on it "For the Jews", and strange things like that. There's also evidence of regular trade between Mississippi and Mexico/Guatemala due to specific pigments that came from Central America. It also looks like Chinese came by ship to Central America on several colonizations and voyages. The traditional history we've been told is really silky, about cavemen walking across the Bering Strait. Why walk when you can sail?
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  37.  @colinchampollion4420  I noticed striking connections and similarities between the sweat lodge, clothing, chanting rituals, dress, and language between Algonquin, Iroquois, and Sami peoples. I have a theory that this is where Suomi (Finnish language) might get its main roots. Sami, Finnish, and Estonian are anomalies in the region, not Indo-European. There are also Ingrians, Livonians, Karelians, and other remnants of Finnic languages in Northwestern Russia, most of which are dead languages that went out over the past 2 decades. Pre-information age archeologists and historians were very myopic mostly, looking for tidy answers to very complex human migratory behaviors over time. The evidence points to far more sea traffic than was known or recognized by academia over the past several centuries. The Mediterranean civilizations had seafaring peoples from Phoenicia, Egypt, Greece (including coastal cities now located in Turkey), Carthage, Sardinia, Sicily, Iberia, etc. The various peoples found throughout North America, Central America, and South America have come from and traveled to other continents at different and overlapping periods of time throughout history. The era of the Vikings and recent European explorers are just the later chapters of that saga. We've had a very interesting record of a group of people who left Babel after the tower, headed north, then crossed a large body of water, before building sealed vessels to cross the Great waters and land in the Americas. Their records were passed onto descendants of another group of people from Jerusalem that fled the Babylonian invasion of Jerusalem in 597 BC, and also traveled by ship to North America. We have inscriptions in the Eastern US in ancient Hebrew. There was so much copper mined from the Great Lakes region in ancient times, that it represented volumes that indicate inter-continental trade. I think natural disasters, cataclysm, and war erase continuity between the historical record, and we're left with a few puzzle pieces.
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