Traveling Prehistoric Seas

About The Book

Until recently the theory that people could have traversed large expanses of ocean in prehistoric times was considered pseudoscience. But recent discoveries in places as disparate as Australia, Labrador, Crete, California, and Chile open the possibility that ancient oceans were highways, not barriers, and that ancient people possessed the means and motives to traverse them. In this brief, thought-provoking, but controversial book Alice Kehoe considers the existing evidence in her reassessment of ancient sailing. Her book-critically analyzes the growing body of evidence on prehistoric sailing to help scholars and students evaluate a highly controversial hypothesis;-examines evidence from archaeology, anthropology, botany, art, mythology, linguistics, maritime technology, architecture, paleopathology, and other disciplines;-presents her evidence in student-accessible language to allow instructors to use this work for teaching critical thinking skills. Chapter 1 Critical Thinking Method; Chapter 2 The Myth of Columbus; Chapter 3 The Question of Boats; Chapter 4 Peripatetic People; Chapter 5 Polynesian Voyaging: Landfall in the Americas; Chapter 6 The Strongest Evidence: Plants and Animals; Chapter 7 Technologies; Chapter 8 Art, Architecture, and Mythology; Chapter 9 The Atlantic World; Chapter 10 Critically Examining pre-Columbian Seas; Chapter 11 Dubitanda;
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