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Joan 1 day ago
#1 So? wassat
       
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Katelin 1 day ago
#1 So when did they discover it? I'm all ears. Let's hear it. Is there a written record of ancient man crossing the frozen Bering sea dating back 40,000 years or so? Or just some legend about them jumping off the back of a giant turtle onto land? Columbus, the Vikings, whoever and however America was discovered is fine with me, just don't package up this self righteous DEI garbage and preach at me like I'm a defacto racist for not canonizing native Americans.
       
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Drew 1 day ago
Katelin,

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 .
       
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Drew 1 day ago
Drew,
*Alaska
       
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Drew 1 day ago
#26 As a historian and anthropologist, I can say the dates make total sense. As people migrated across the planet the ages of the images corresponds. And the idea of a winged man is obviously part of the human story telling for eons. I drew the exact same thing as a kid never having g seen these.
       
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Nibby 1 day ago
#18 60 is divisible by 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12, 15, 20 and 30 (without leaving a remainder) making it easy to calculate with.
       
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"These two leaning towers are symbol of Bologna, a town in northern Italy which was once nicknamed ‘La Turrita’ on account of its 150+towers, of which only 24 remain today. Legend has it that they were inspiration for World Trade Center, since architect Minoru Yamasaki visited Bologna while designing Trade Center towers.

Both Towers take name of families who in 12th Century CE, ordered their construction, in a kind of competition to show which family was wealthiest and most powerful. Tallest of two is called Asinelli, while shorter is Garisenda, which leans more than Tower of Pisa by 0.1 degree. In fact, Garisenda was once taller than Asinelli, but when ground yielded in 14th Century CE, incline became so dangerous that they had to shorten it by 12m. Dante Alighieri saw it while it was still at its full height, and referred to it in Canto 31 of The Inferno where he compared it to doubled over giant, Anteo."

 

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