"While attempting to photograph the iconic El Capitan in Yosemite National Park, a photographer captured something truly extraordinary—the Andromeda Galaxy!
Known as the M31 Galaxy, Andromeda is the closest spiral galaxy to our own Milky Way, located about 2.5 million light-years away. It contains over a trillion stars, and is one of the few galaxies visible to the naked eye from Earth. Its light, traveling across millions of years, reaches us as a faint, smudgy shape in the night sky, which the photographer accidentally framed perfectly while focusing on El Capitan.
El Capitan, the majestic granite monolith that rises over 3,000 feet above Yosemite Valley, is a favorite subject for many photographers. But in this case, the photographer inadvertently captured the Andromeda Galaxy, creating a stunning blend of earthly and cosmic beauty in one shot."
Actually the dates of artifacts of coastal Aladsk natives (fish trap pegs, and lithographic remains, date back between 20-30,000. There is also new discoveries made with carbon dating man made objects from high mountain areas (which were closer to the water before geological processes). Novice kids who learned random information in proven historically inaccurate textbooks need to shut up or bother to learn the modern facts. Modern science beings all kinds of historical lies to forefront .
*Alaska