Hello everyone - 

Some info and some questions. 

The feather blankets were extremely difficult to make, and of high value.
One important point is exactly what feathers were used to make them - If they 
were parrot feathers imported from Mexico, then its value would have been very 
very very high. Eagle feathers were also of very high value. And then so on 
down the list of feathers...

My first guess is that Eagle feathers might have been used. Perhaps the 
meteorite was seen as the result of a sky battle between Thunderbird and 
Unktena, sky serpents, or perhaps it was viewed as an offspring of Mother Earth 
returning home. Answering this is depth would require some study, and resources 
well beyond me right now.

The Camp Verde meteorite is presented as a transport from Canyon Diablo, but 
might it not be an outlying fragment? If so, then this has important 
implications for current hunting. Was there a stream, an air burst, or did 
larger fragments survive the impact blast in lenses and be ejected?

Or was Camp Verde a separate fall?

Using the C14 spike from Incal 98, the Barringer impact may be seen around 
44,000 BCE, if memory serves.  While the mountains north of Flagstaff were 
undoubtedly one of the earliest sites settled, with their permanent and 
abundant water supply in the snow cap and abundant game on the Little Colorado 
River nearby, and the C mitochondrial DNA crossing is now likely to have 
occurred shortly before that date, that the Canyon Diablo impact was seen and 
remembered does not seem likely to me. 

It is up to the Zuni, Hopi, and Navajo elders to share what they want to share 
about other observed impacts and the ancient ones.

"The structure on the mesa" - I don't know if this was a regular dwelling, or 
perhaps more likely one of the southwest's observatory structures, with windows 
centered on astronomical events. I wonder what happened to the site?

Where is the Camp Verde meteorite today? Perhaps the best place for its display 
would be at "Montezeuma's Castle", the public site nearby. In any case, in my 
opinion the Camp Verde site and meteorite is the patrimony of all Arizonans, 
including those of Native American descent.

E.P. Grondine
Man and Impact in the Americas









      
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