--- In [email protected], [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>  
> In a message dated 7/16/05 2:16:38 P.M. Central Daylight Time,  
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> 
> Thanks.  Didn't know about the Buddhist-Glastonbury
> connection  at all.  And I knew Buddhists generally 
> traveled to spread the  dharma, but I've always thought
> of the Tibetans as being pretty isolated  because of
> the geography.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Tibetans came to the new world long before Buddha was ever  thought 
of. A 
> friend of mine who's father is an anthropologist says two things  
the native 
> American and Tibetan have in common that you don't find in other  
gene  pools is 
> the shape of their teeth teeth and oddly enough a  red oval shaped 
spot on the 
> tale bone. The same gene  pool that settled  Tibet also migrated 
north east 
> and across to Alaska and on downward as far south  as Argentina. 
look  at a full 
> blooded Cheyenne or Lakota  and a  Tibetan and you can't tell which 
is which.

That's pretty muchthe standard explanation for the first settlers of 
North America, but they weren't Tibetans at that time, and their 
culture was probably not THAT similar to what we call Tibetan.





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