All this powerfully supports our primary contention that the Bronze Age sea route in the Atlantic took the Gulf Stream from the latitude of Bimini/Georgia to the Latitude of the Isle of Lewis. Thus the populations of northern Ireland and Western Scotland in particular has to intermingle with populations in the SE USA.
The Atlantean fleet sailed every year for well over a thousand years at the height of the Bronze Age and the circle route sustained traffic after 1159 BC right past the Roman era into the Northern Iron Age in Europe. Plenty of folks made that trip and it is reasonable to understand the populating of Eastern North America and plausibly into Mexico and the Andes in pursuit of metal as well as driven by this copper trade feeding Europe and the Mediterranean.
Thus we have DNA identifiers of Northern Europe and the Levant but nothing unique to Eastern North America. It is thus highly plausible that this human traffic has always been the big picture.
The actual transit before 1159 BC was close and obvious as well. Even today it is a summer time trip westward in a large row boat as has been done. Then you had Lyonese to get you half way there and the Azores as well and the Bahama Bank all above water. These all were on the circle route as well.
Thus traffic starting over ten thousand years ago is completely reasonable and even likely as it was easy enough in the summer time. The same held true for Australia and other supposed sea barriers.
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Early Scottish immigrants . . . the joke is on me!
https://peopleofonefire.com/early-scottish-immigrants-the-joke-is-on-me.html
The previous POOF article
under the Humor column was an editorial about the statistically unsound
techniques that publicity-hungry genetics professors are using to garner
articles about their research in the news media. The most outrageous
recent case was the genetic analysis of a 10,000 year old baby’s
skeleton in the Northern Plains. It had DNA similar to modern American
Indians and was near Clovis points. The academic team then distributed a
press release that stated that the skeleton was proof that all American
Indians walked over the land bridge between Siberia and Alaska!
You can’t do that. With
only a few skeletons of this age being found in all of the Americas, one
cannot generalize about them. Vast areas of the Americas, like the
Southeastern United States, have acidic soils which eat up skeletons
quickly. Also, the coastline of Eastern North America 12,000 years ago
extended 50 to 100 miles east of where it is now. There are no DNA
test markers for indigenous peoples east of the Mississippi River. So,
currently there is no way to know the ethnic identity of who was living
in Eastern North America thousands of years ago. However, what we think
the truth is last Monday changed on Saturday morning.
At the end of the article I ran a spoof
research report. Supposedly, we had done genetic testing on a class of
24 students at McIntosh Elementary School in northeastern Oklahoma . . .
the old Cherokee Nation. All 24 students carried at least some
Scottish Gaelic DNA markers, while only the six students, whose mothers
were Creek, carried any Native American DNA. The People of One Fire
therefore distributed an international press release stating that we had
genetic proof that the first Americans were all Scots. LOL I assumed
that the story was so implausible that all readers would realize that
it was a spoof . . . aka fake news.
Ancient words
First, let me remind readers that
geneticists have discovered that the aboriginal people of Ireland and
the Scottish Highlands had black hair, brown eyes , bronze skin and
Asiatic faces. The ancestors of the Britains in the rest of Scotland
and points southward had dark skin, dark hair and blue eyes.
Thus, an
Irish aborigine would have looked similar to a mixed blood American
Indian.
I am finishing up a long, detailed
article on the use of linguistics to create a more accurate
understanding of the Peopling of the Americas. For several months I have
known that the Uchee suffix for people or tribe is the same as the
Archaic Gaelic suffix for a people, tribe or province. It is re, reigh or ry . . . but pronounced like rē.
This past Wednesday I discovered that the people living in the
aboriginal territory of the Scots . . . Ulster, the Atlantic Coast of
Scotland and the Orkney Islands, like the Uchee and Creeks, rolled their
R’s so hard that speakers of other languages often write the sound down
as an L. This is the reason for the “lee” and “ly” ending for many
place and tribal names within the interior of the Lower Southeast.
For about a year, I have known that
the original (pre-Cherokee) name for the province that roughly included
the Tuckasegee River Basin over to Franklin, NC and Toccoa, GA was named
Curra. Remember indigenous R sounds were often written as L’s by the Europeans.
Thus, in that region, we find Cullowhee. NC, the Judaculla Rock
(Cherokee-nization of “Sky over Curra,”) Cullasaja River, the Cullasee
Creeks (branch of Creek Confederacy) and Currahee Mountain. GA. Curra
was the ancient goddess of fertility and the underworld in ancient
Ireland. It was also the archaic word for a spear, so Curra was often
known as the “Spear Goddess.”
This morning, while polishing up the
BIG linguistics article, I became curious if there were any place names
in Ireland or Scotland similar to Curra. Oh yes! Curra was the Bronze
Age name for a kingdom that included Ulster and the western edge of Scotland.
That is the region that pronounces an R almost as an L . . . just like
the Creeks. There are several modern family and first names derived
from kingdom’s name . . . Curry, Cory, McCurry, O’Curry, MacCrory and
Cora. At that point, I figured that I better write a short article on
POOF, explaining my new discovery. This is proof of what I often warn
readers. What I write one week as the facts might be proven the next
week to be part of the facts.
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