It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
originally posted by: bigfatfurrytexan
The south American indigenous state that they came upon their monuments and buildings from a prior people.
originally posted by: bigfatfurrytexan
a reply to: Harte
I believe machi Pichu can be added to that list...but Im willing to be wrong
originally posted by: Harte
originally posted by: bigfatfurrytexan
The south American indigenous state that they came upon their monuments and buildings from a prior people.
There are few sites like that, where later cultures took them over.
Teotihuacan is one (but we know of the culture that built it through Archaeology,) and the Aztecs occupied a few old sites (and we know the origins of those sites as well.)
But as a collective, the South American indigenous people have stated no such thing. There is ONE incident recorded by a Spanish chronicler where the Inca denied they had built Tiwanaku, and we know (again, through Archaeology) they were telling the truth.
Harte
Well if that were true the same scientists in your source would probably have detected large amounts of rare earth met
What having been built by someone else and the Inca took over? There MIGHT have been something smaller there at one point but the main town of MP is clearly an Inca design. Who do you feel might have been there first?
Terra preta sites in the Brazilian Amazon were created by pre-Columbian societies between 500 and 8,700 years ago. Most tropical rainforest soil is nutrient-poor and unsuitable for intensive agriculture, but terra preta, which is found scattered throughout the Brazilian Amazon region, is so fertile that it can still be farmed today. Growing interest among scientific researchers worldwide focuses on this soil type as a possible means of carbon sequestration and an alternative to environmentally destructive slash-and-burn agricultural techniques. Various researchers are attempting to reproduce terra preta in order to encourage sustainable tropical agriculture.