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Archaeologists refute claims that a comet destroyed Hopewell culture

phys.org Archaeologists refute claims that a comet destroyed Hopewell culture

In February 2022, the journal Scientific Reports published a paper with the claim that a comet exploded over what is now Cincinnati around 1,500 years ago, raining fire over the area and destroying villages and farm fields, supposedly resulting in the rapid decline of the ancient Indigenous Hopewell...

Archaeologists refute claims that a comet destroyed Hopewell culture

Research led by University of Cincinnati archaeologist Dr. Kenneth Tankersley claimed "evidence of a cosmic airburst at 11 Hopewell archaeological sites in three states stretching across the Ohio River Valley." His evidence included the presence of meteorites, iron and silica-rich microspherules claimed to be from meteorites, and spikes in iridium and platinum—all supposedly associated with burned charcoal-rich Hopewell habitations.

Dr. Kevin C. Nolan, director and senior archaeologist of the Applied Anthropology Laboratories at Ball State University, along with eleven other scholars with varied expertise—including several specialists in the Hopewell culture and the Smithsonian Institution's Curator of Meteorites—have reviewed that evidence and found it to be wholly inadequate to support such an extraordinary claim.

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