Independent researcher Tom Talbot and University of Michigan’s Dr. Henry Wright and Anthropology PhD. student Brendan Nash discuss discoveries indicating 11,000 BCE Clovis technology in the Great Lakes basin. But what about the claim that A ‘Stonehenge-Like’ Structure Exists in Lake Michigan, and Is 9,000 Years Old? John O’Shea, another U of M prof, here suggests, in an embedded video, a similar stone arrangement in Lake Huron was a “drive lane” for herding animals for mass caribou killings. But the “Stonehenge” comparison and “Mastodon drawing” in the K102.5 Kalamazoo Michigan article remain up for interpretation. Graham Hancock’s new Netflix series is garnering lots of viewers and scads of criticism, notes Jason Colavito in The Strange and Dangerous Right-Wing Freakout Over Ancient Apocalypse. Attackers think the series is wrong and derivative, racist in tone, anti-science, and conspiracy-mongering. Speaking of controversies, is philologist Dr. Andrew Breeze’s claim of a Greek Discovery of Iceland Supported by Linguistic Evidence a sound argument? Whether Norse scholars will agree with English profs is debatable, but Paula Tsoni’s included “Iceland” video offers what some might call “cold, hard evidence” for the claim. (WM)
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