Harvest Season: A Message from the Past

Autumn is in full swing in the Northern Hemisphere, but you really can’t appreciate it unless you live somewhere where the leaves are changing. Fall is a great season full of history. It is also the time to spend as much time outside before winter sets in. Sure, winter has its own history and traditions, but halfway through it you are ready for it to be over. Fall, on the other hand, is often way too short.

One of the season’s highlights is the focus on harvest and the related festivals. Yes, we all enjoy these, especially Thanksgiving, though by then it often feels like winter. In the past these events took on great importance as people stocked up for winter and enjoyed the transitional temps while they lasted. But I wonder if people should pay some more attention to the harvest season like they once did.

We are so used to walking into Wal-Mart and buying our food and have no clue where it comes from. Nor do we know what’s in it and we waste it by the ton. What happens if we face a natural or man-made catastrophe? Or even a temporary (few month long) problem with food supplies? And what would people do if they couldn’t get fruit year-round anymore like back in the day?

Maybe people should use this season to learn to be a little more self-reliant. Figure out what they would do if they couldn’t get to the store for a few days. I’m not talking about building bunkers here, but most people would be at a complete loss. Do you have a back-up heat source? Water? Food for a couple days? It’s really common sense, but we have become so pampered we think buying milk, bread and toliet paper is all the survival skills we need.

Our ancestors knew to plan ahead. Their lives depended on it. Sadly, most people today don’t realize that just one small hiccup can change everything.

P.S. If you read the link above about the tons of food we waste, I hope you also conclude that there should be no hungry people in this world. Perhaps this season, as it often has, should be used by everyone to find ways to waste less and share more.

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Ancient Art in Danger

Well, gee, if you expose them to thousands of people every year, what did you expect? More here.

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Mythology: Fact and Fiction

If you have ever read the mythologies of past cultures, they are full of wondrous and unbelievable tales of long-lost races, battling gods and supernatural conflicts.

It is often said, however, that myth and legend have tidbits of truth. The problem is that many people will mine myth looking for something they supports their preconceived notion. Often those notions are reinterpreting the past through the glasses of the present.

There is a popular image of an Egyptian hieroglyph bandied about that supposedly depicts electricity in the ancient world. The images are often poor reproductions of the real thing. Close-up photos of the actual panels quickly shows the Egyptians aren’t holding light-bulbs connected to a power system. There are many mysteries in the past, but when researchers do such poor presentation in their “evidence,” scholars are quickly turned off even if there are other valid theories presented.

Uncovering the lost technologies and knowledge of the ancients is a popular, and valid, field of research, but it is pockmarked by the strange. Sure, even in the mainstream, theories come and go and acceptance of new ideas often goes through an inordinate level of scrutiny. But when people see spaceships and aliens in ancient carvings, is that what is really there, or are we seeing what we want to see?

Sometimes our skepticism makes us miss the trees in the forest. The Viking sagas and their tales of journeys to the new world were once thought myth. Not anymore. That doesn’t mean cyclops or ogres once existed, but the Troy of Homer’s Odyssey certainly did. How can we tell the difference? Compare an account of Columbus’ voyage next to Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings. Most anyone will see the difference. Is it always that clear? Usually it is or you will at least be able to pull out the fantastical from the potentially real.

We shouldn’t accept every theory without reservation. By the same token, it would be a mistake to exclude all fantastic happenings from history simply because we don’t understand them.

Studying history, afterall, is a thinking enterprise.

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Historic Preservation

Another way you can protect historic sites is through the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Go here to learn more and join.

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Ancient America Unveiled

The current issue of American Archaeology (Vol. 15 No. 3, Fall 2011) has some interesting articles chronicling the latest changes in thought on Ancient America. The latest on the continuously receding date for man’s arrival here is detailed in “Making a Case for the Pre-Clovis.” Digs in Texas are contributing to the Clovis First theory’s decline. In “The Mesoamerican-Southwest Connection” we read about the influences of natives south of the border on the north. How far-flung were trade routes? How much influence and relations were there? Such things aren’t that surprising. For a long time we have allowed ourselves to be limited by modern borders, not thinking the ancients had very different lines. In “Polynesian Contact?” we see that the forbidden idea of pre-Columbus visits to America is starting to falter. Julian Smith writes:

“Historically, there has been lots of wild, crazy speculation about developments in the New World being ultimately caused by contact with the Old World,” says [archaeologist Terry] Jones. A lot was due to cultural biases against Native Americans, but ironically, the gradual acknowledgement of their homegrown achievements helped push the theory of trans-Pacific contact even more out of favor. As a result, by the end of the 20th Century, the idea had become almost taboo among American archaeologists.

I have discussed this in all of my books. First being decimated by disease, then forced off their lands and subject to the stereotype of being savages, people were easily convinced that the natives were nothing more than cavemen who couldn’t create earthworks, sophisticated structures or civilizations. The wild tales of Josiah Priest and others in the 1800s built on these misconceptions and wove Indian legends into their stories. Fantasies of races of the Old World building and warring here were commonplace. Ever since, natives have been wary of the idea of visitors lest they are given credit for anything found here.

Those who think this through first realize the stereotypes are false. They also conclude that no civilization lives in isolation for so long. All peoples are influenced by others. That doesn’t mean that the natives here can’t take credit for most of their history. Their own ancestors made it here. Other cultures were accomplished seafarers. To pretend no one could get here is as ridiculous as thinking Indians could do nothing on their own. Now, as the article mentions, some native tribes aren’t subscribing to the misconceptions created by their own people. In fact, some have said they “always [have] known [contact had] happened.”

Now maybe the rest of the people on both sides of the debate can catch up.

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Archaeology Gone Bad

In this review of a DVD on early America, see how archaeology can be abused to fit bias or a particular belief. Sometimes in a very subtle fashion. It happens in all sciences, but people still fail to test what they watch or hear. Mainstream, fringe or somewhere in the middle, all have hits, and all fall down once in awhile.

Categories: Ancient America, Critical Thinking, Native Americans | 1 Comment

2000 Year-old Geoglyphs in Arabia

The ancient world continues to provide us with mysteries. Read more here.

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An Era Ends

Normally we discuss very ancient history here, but this week ends the Space Shuttle program. While it never flew as much as intended, nor brought costs of spaceflight down, it did make it normal. Hard to believe it has been thirty years since the first flight in 1981. Like most government run programs, it was hampered by the changing whims of politicians, as has the entire space program. Ever since Apollo was ended early, the government has never embraced the grand plans and future-thinking legacies that spaceflight could bring. We are decades behind where we could be. For insight to what space travel could bring mankind, check out The Survival Imperative: Using Space to Protect Earth, Mining The Sky: Untold Riches From The Asteroids, Comets and Planets, The Case for Mars and Return to the Moon.

Energy. Resources. Exploration. Knowledge. A New Frontier.

Perhaps the next stage of human history.

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You Can Protect History

Many are interested in our history. We read books on those who came before us. Maybe we can’t go out and dig for ancient artifacts, but that doesn’t mean we can’t have some tangible involvement. For every interest or cause there is some group that, with your support, accomplish what you would like to do if you could. Want to protect America’s history? Then check out the Archaeology Conservancy. Since 1980 they have protected hundreds of sites in the United States. We have had a bad habit of burying, flooding or bulldozing our history. Some of this stems from the misconception that there wasn’t much here in the past. That past, however, often whispers advice and lessons that would be beneficial to our future.

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Antiquity 101

Know the 7 wonders of the ancient world? Think UFOs built the pyramids? Are you worried about 2012? If you answered no, yes, yes, then you should ask for your money back from the schools you attended. Then read The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, The Pyramids and Aztec and Maya and reclaim your education.

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