Anonynja t1_j18w5uc wrote
Reply to comment by dubamamorange in Discovery of 1,000 previously unknown Maya settlements challenges the old notion of sparse early human occupation in northern Guatemala (ca. 1000 B.C.–A.D. 150) by marketrent
Don't forget how much education and experts raised on debunked theories lag behind. You can assume many readers only ever heard the "old notion" and haven't updated their info with the newer understanding that many tens of millions of people lived in the so-called Americas before colonization and genocide.
ITDrumm3r t1_j18z7u8 wrote
Not the story people want to hear. I was taught something much different and I live in Texas near the border. I just recently heard about how populated the Americas were. I had to seek out the info. It’s not something you hear much about. Maybe kids learn about this now but in Texas, I doubt it.
[deleted] t1_j19n71p wrote
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FoolishConsistency17 t1_j194psx wrote
The 'sparsely populated America' has very deep roots.
Tudhal t1_j195xxg wrote
>many tens of millions of people lived in the so-called Americas before colonization and genocide.
This article is about the region 2000 years before Columbus.
There weren’t many places on the planet in 1000 BC to 100 AD with tens of millions of people.
Even Rome was scarcely more than a village in 500 BC.
[deleted] t1_j18xuf5 wrote
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