From the International Business Times:
14,550-year-old prehistoric underwater site reveals traces of humans in the Americas
Archaeological research conducted at a prehistorical site in Florida has revealed that hunter-gatherers lived in the region more than 14,000 years ago, long before the Clovis culture arrived in the Americas.
The Clovis culture is a Paleo-Indian culture, which scientists believe to be one of the first human civilizations to have come to the Americas, and to have spread to the south-east between 12,900 and 13,200 years ago.
However, the latest research, based on radio-carbon dating and published in the journal Scientific Advances, suggests other human populations may have been there before.
So, the new findings are under 30 feet of seawater. If sea level rise is a recent thing, care to explain how the artifacts were found there?
Just like Bob Ballard's discovery of Noah's flood in the Black Sea - 7,000 year old archaeological ruins 300 feet under the water.
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