Man Across the Sea: Problems of Pre-Columbian Contacts

Capa
Carroll L. Riley, J. Charles Kelley, Campbell W. Pennington, Robert L. Rands
University of Texas Press, 14 de out. de 2014 - 570 páginas

Whether humans crossed the seas between the Old World and the New in the times before Columbus is a tantalizing question that has long excited scholarly interest and tempted imaginations the world over. From the myths of Atlantis and Mu to the more credible, perhaps, but hardly less romantic tales of Viking ships and Buddhist missionaries, people have speculated upon what is, after all, not simply a question of contact, but of the nature and growth of civilization itself.

To the specialist, it is an important question indeed. If people in the Western Hemisphere and in the Eastern Hemisphere developed their cultures more or less independently from the end of the last Ice Age until the voyages of Columbus, the remarkable similarities between New World and Old World cultures reveal something important about the evolution of culture. If, on the other hand, there were widespread or sustained contacts between the hemispheres in pre-Columbian times, these contacts represent events of vast significance to the prehistory and history of humanity.

Originally delivered at a symposium held in May 1968, during the national meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, the papers presented here, by scholars eminent in the field, offer differing points of view and considerable evidence on the pros and cons of pre-Columbian contact between the Old World and the New. Various kinds of data—archaeological, botanical, geographical, and historical—are brought to bear on the problem, with provocative and original results. Introductory and concluding remarks by the editors pull together and evaluate the evidence and suggest ground rules for future studies of this sort.

Man across the Sea provides no final answers as to whether people from Asia, Africa, or Europe visited the American Indian before Columbus. It does, however, present new evidence, suggested lines of approach, and a fresh attempt to delineate the problems involved and to establish acceptable canons of evidence for the future.

 

Páginas selecionadas

Conteúdo

Preface and Acknowledgments
SECTION I
Section I
SECTION II
Vinland and the Way Thither
European or Indigene?
ROBERTA KENNEDY 14 Small Boats uponthe North Atlantic
Section II
Endemism and PreColumbian Migration of the Bottle
Construction of the Hypothesis for Distribution of
An Exercise in Methodology
Travels of Corn and Squash
PreColumbian Maize in Asia
Some Problems of Interpreting Transoceanic Dispersal
DANIELRANDALL BEIRNE 9 PreColumbian Chickens in America
Direitos autorais

SECTION III

Outras edições - Ver todos

Termos e frases comuns

Sobre o autor (2014)

Carroll L. Riley, J. Charles Kelley, Campbell W. Pennington, and Robert L. Rands are retired from the faculty of Southern Illinois University.

Informações bibliográficas