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Monthly Archives: January 2018
The Berbers under religious avalanches
Tunisia was originally named Ifriqiya by the Muslims, a name later given to the entire continent of Africa. That massive continent now, as I write this, using worldometer.info has a population of 1,273,897,847 with a landmass of 30.37 million km². We can … Continue reading
Posted in anthropocene
Tagged Berbers, christianity, conquest, egypt, france, indigenous, islam, muslim, near East, North Africa, spain
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Natural disasters as acts of God – or gods.
Around 14000 years ago, where there were some adjoining islands in the Nile Delta, trading took place and became established until the city of Thonis-Heracleion was gradually built, intersected by canals. It had a number of harbors and anchorages and … Continue reading
Posted in anthropocene
Tagged arabia, christianity, egypt, gods, greece, idols, islam, mediterranean, Muhammad, natural disasters, paganism, Persia, power, Thonis-Heracleion, trade
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The cooling of the earth and help and hindrance of glaciation
The dinosaurs never saw snow or ice, the planet had not cooled during their existence. Their fate was sealed when a rogue space rock the size of a city struck Earth 66 million years ago, near what is now the … Continue reading
Posted in anthropocene
Tagged agriculture, Alaska, Canada, far East Russia, glacial retreat, glaciers, inuit, Kenya, Peru, pleistocene, Siberia, woolly mammoth
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2.5 Mya Africa: Homo habilis (Handy Man) to 15.5 thousand years ago in Americas
We all know how we each care about the location attributes of where we find ourselves living. We may be, currently, thousands of years down the line since our ancestors began to walk on two legs rather then four, but … Continue reading
Posted in anthropocene
Tagged Africa, Americas, england, flint, france, homo erectus, homo habilis, Leakey, pleistocene, solutrean, stone tools, wood
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