Can't help it, but Tom Wall's headline recalls the beginning to
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. And folks really planning to lie down in front of bulldozers carries the comparison further. But this is a real-life quandary, with groups on both sides possessing expertise and valid arguments. Hopefully this long-standing issue can be solved before any Vogon Constructor Fleets show up. Archaeologists are completely upending traditional views of who first developed an important technique with evidence of
Zeolite Water Purification at Tikal, an Ancient Maya City in Guatemala. The research team notes "Archaeologists have long believed that the Indigenous people of the Western Hemisphere lacked any formal water filtration systems." Moreover, this is "the oldest known use of zeolite for decontaminating drinking water in the world"--far predating the previous assumption of the beginning of the twentieth century. And a traditional view of "woman's place" is challenged by an
Ancient Burial of Fierce Female Hunter (and Her Weapons) Discovered in Peru. Yasemin Saplakoglu reports evidence "in stark contrast to the accepted history of such hunter-gatherers." (WM)
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from THE ANOMALIST https://bit.ly/3lgp9F0
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