Ancient Polynesians No Strangers to the Americas

bill barilko

Senate Member
Mar 4, 2009
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This has long been suspected by the evidence ignored/surpressed by ignorant Euro centric fools

Polynesian seafarers discovered America long before Europeans, says DNA study
New DNA analysis of sweet potatoes, which were first cultivated in the Americas, suggests that Polynesians reached the New World long before Columbus.





The prevailing theory about the "rediscovery" of the American continents used to be such a simple tale. Most people are familiar with it: In 1492, Christopher Columbus sailed the ocean blue. Then that theory was complicated when, in 1960, archaeologists discovered a site in Canada's Newfoundland, called L'Anse aux Meadows, which proved that Norse explorers likely beat Columbus to the punch by about 500 years.

Now startling new DNA evidence promises to complicate the story even more. It turns out that it was not Columbus or the Norse — or any Europeans at all — who first rediscovered the Americas. It was actually the Polynesians.

All modern Polynesian peoples can trace their origins back to a sea-migrating Austronesian people who were the first humans to discover and populate most of the Pacific islands, including lands as far-reaching as Hawaii, New Zealand and Easter Island. Despite the Polynesians' incredible sea-faring ability, however, few theorists have been willing to say that Polynesians could have made it as far east as the Americas. That is, until now.

Clues about the migration patterns of the early Polynesians have been revealed thanks to a new DNA analysis performed on a prolific Polynesian crop: the sweet potato, according to Nature. The origin of the sweet potato in Polynesia has long been a mystery, since the crop was first domesticated in the Andes of South America about 8,000 years ago, and it couldn't have spread to other parts of the world until contact was made. In other words, if Europeans were indeed the first to make contact with the Americas between 500 and 1,000 years ago, then the sweet potato shouldn't be found anywhere else in the world until then.

The extensive DNA study looked at genetic samples taken from modern sweet potatoes from around the world and historical specimens kept in herbarium collections. Remarkably, the herbarium specimens included plants collected during Capt. James Cook’s 1769 visits to New Zealand and the Society Islands. The findings confirmed that sweet potatoes in Polynesia were part of a distinct lineage that were already present in the area when European voyagers introduced different lines elsewhere. In other words, sweet potatoes made it out of America before European contact.

The question remains: How else could Polynesians have gotten their hands on sweet potatoes prior to European contact, if not by traveling to America themselves? The possibility that sweet potato seeds could have inadvertently floated from the Americas to Polynesia on land rafts is believed to be highly unlikely.

Researchers believe that Polynesian seafarers must have discovered the Americas first, long before Europeans did. The new DNA evidence, taken together with archaeological and linguistic evidence regarding the timeline of Polynesian expansion, suggests that an original contact date between 500 CE and 700 CE between Polynesia and America seems likely. That means that Polynesians would have arrived in South America even before the Norse had landed in Newfoundland.

The findings show that the technological capabilities of ancient peoples and cultures from around the world should not be underestimated, and that the history of human expansion across the globe is probably far more complicated than anyone could have previously imagined.
 

taxslave

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Nov 25, 2008
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We've known this for years. This is why the coastal natives have so much more in common with Polynesia than with eastern natives. There is also indications that the North Coast was "Discovered " by people from eastern Russia long before Columbus got lost.
 

taxslave

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Nov 25, 2008
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How are we sure they were here first? Did they make reservations? :lol:



only if you believe the sumerian epic

Reservation were not invented for several thousand years afterwards. You just run your boat up on shore and took your chances there was space at the local Howard Johnsons.
 

coldstream

on dbl secret probation
Oct 19, 2005
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I think human DNA would be more convincing than that of Sweet Potatoes. Seeds, tubers and spores can be wind or water borne. There has always been speculation that Polynesians travelled to the Americas.. in pre-Columbian times..but as far as i am aware. the human DNA evidence indicates that all of the migration originated from northern Asia.. likely during during the last Ice Age by way of an ice bridge across the Bering Sea.
 
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Cliffy

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Nov 19, 2008
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I think human DNA would be more convincing than that of Sweet Potatoes. Seeds, tubers and spores can be wind or water borne. There has always been speculation that Polynesians travelled to the Americas.. in pre-Columbian times..but as far as i am aware. the human DNA evidence indicates that all of the migration originated from northern Asia.. likely during during the last Ice Age by way of an ice bridge across the Bering Sea.
That is ancient history. The Bering land bridge theory has been debunked. Eastern aboriginals have a lot of European DNA, but in south and central America there is Polynesian and Aborigine DNA. In Terra del Fuego there is an African tribe that has been there for thousands of years. With the link I posted above, there is evidence of human occupation going back 250 thousand years. Time to stop living in the past Coldstream. We are living in the 21st century now.