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The website for #Ahnishnahbeh / Ojibway artist, Eric C. Keast and the creations of his #BingoRageStudio #painting #sculpture Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
" The fossilized remains date to 38,000 to 42,000 years ago, making it the oldest modern human skeleton from eastern Eurasia, and one of the oldest modern humans from the region, the authors of the paper said. The specimen is basically a modern human, but with a few archaic characteristics in the teeth and hand bone."
"By the time you're done with this phase you can be 99 percent confident that there was recurrent genetic interchange between African and Eurasian populations," he said. "So the idea of pure, distinct races in humans does not exist. We humans don't have a tree relationship, rather a trellis. We're intertwined."
" The single toe bone which was unearthed seems to suggest the individual wore shoes, pushing back the earliest known evidence for footwear by about 10,000 years."
Feature Interview: Rusty Gillette with DrumHop.net.
Bird Singing Feature: Interview about Bird singing and dancing from Morongo Thunder and Lighting Pow Wow.
Podcast: Indian Country Headline News
What is it?: A weekly audio podcast providing a summary of national news items important to all Native communities.
" Welcome to Pranks.com, produced and edited by Joey Skaggs. Here you will find insights, information, news and discussions about pranks, hoaxes, culture jamming & reality hacking around the world - past, present and future - mainstream and counter culture. You are invited to contribute to its development. May your journey be filled with more than your expectations."
" Welcome to Falmouth Institute Online. For more than 20 years, the Institute has been assisting Indian tribes, tribal organizations and government agencies to meet the complex challenges of Indian Country. We've established ourselves as the leading provider of training seminars and conferences, hands-on consulting, and publishing services dedicated solely to the issues impacting tribes today."
" The Canadian Corps' commanders were determined to learn from the mistakes of the French and British... including issuing detailed maps to ordinary soldiers rather than officers or NCOs alone. Each platoon was to be given a complete picture of the battle plan and given a specific task, rather than vague instructions from an absent general. This new approach in battle planning, a departure from generations of British military protocol..."
