One of the more blatant examples of political correctness          has been the refusal of scientists (Jared Diamond being an honorable          exception) to attribute the rapid extinction of most giant mammals in          the New World shortly after the end of the last Ice Age to the arrival          of the Indians, who, as we've all been told over and over, were          sensitive vegan eco-feminists.
       
        For example, the George C. Page museum at the La Brea Tar Pits on          Wilshire Blvd., which is full of incredible skeletons of elephants,          camels, and so forth pulled from the pits, explains that the Ice Age          climate of Los Angeles was like that of modern day Monterey, CA: mild          and moist. Yet, the museum then pushes the idea that maybe the Indians          didn't eat all the big beasts, maybe they just died from climate change.          But why wouldn't they just walk north to Monterey? In general, the end          of the Ice Age made it easier to survive: for example, the mile thick          sheet of ice that covered much of North America disappeared.
Giant Creatures Wiped Out by Hunters, Not Climate
Weapon-wielding  humans, and not warming temperatures, killed off the sloth and other giant  mammals that roamed North America during the last Ice Age, a new study suggests.
The arrival of humans onto the American continent and the great thaw that  occurred near the end of the last Ice Age both occurred at roughly the same  time, about 11,000 years ago. Until now, scientists were unable to tease apart  the two events.
To get around this problem, David Steadman, a researcher at the University of  Florida, used radiocarbon to date fossils from the islands of Cuba and  Hispaniola, where humans didn't set foot until more than 6,000 years after their  arrival on the American continent.
The West Indian ground sloth, a mammal that was the size of a modern elephant,  also disappeared from the islands around this time. "If climate were the  major factor driving the extinction of ground sloths, you would expect the  extinctions to occur at about the same time on both the islands and the  continent since climate change is a global event," Steadman said.
His findings are detailed in the Aug. 2 issue of the journal for the Proceedings  of the National Academy of Sciences.
This could also explain why more than three-fourths of the large Ice Age mammal  species -- including giant wooly mammoths, mastodons, saber-toothed tigers and  giant bears -- that roamed many parts of North America became extinct within the  span of a few thousand years.
"It was as dramatic as the extinction of the dinosaurs 65 million years  ago," Steadman said.
If climate change were the major factor in the mass extinction, fewer animals  might have been affected, since most species of plants and animals can adapt to  temperature changes.
The Wooly Mammoth survived on Wrangel Island in the Arctic until 2,000 BC.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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