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left-of-center2012

(34,195 posts)
Sun Aug 19, 2018, 11:05 AM Aug 2018

Archaeologists explore a rural field in Kansas, and a lost city emerges [View all]

Locals have long scoured fields and river banks for arrowheads and bits of pottery, amassing huge collections. Then there were those murky tales of a sprawling city on the Great Plains and a chief who drank from a goblet of gold.

A few years ago, Donald Blakeslee, an anthropologist and archaeology professor at Wichita State University, began piecing things together. And what he’s found has spurred a rethinking of traditional views on the early settlement of the Midwest, while potentially filling a major gap in American history.

Using freshly translated documents written by the Spanish conquistadors more than 400 years ago and an array of high-tech equipment, Blakeslee located what he believes to be the lost city of Etzanoa, home to perhaps 20,000 people between 1450 and 1700.

They lived in thatched, beehive-shaped houses that ran for at least five miles along the bluffs and banks of the Walnut and Arkansas rivers. Blakeslee says the site is the second-largest ancient settlement in the country after Cahokia in Illinois.

http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-kansas-lost-city-20180819-htmlstory.html#

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Thanks for finding and sharing this! nt elfin Aug 2018 #1
I love this sorta stuff... SMC22307 Aug 2018 #2
This is fascinating PatSeg Aug 2018 #3
Great article. dalton99a Aug 2018 #4
Many are unaware Spanish conquistadors made it to Kansas left-of-center2012 Aug 2018 #5
For what it's worth my high school was named for this explorer. n/t ChazII Aug 2018 #26
Thanks - fascinating article! highplainsdem Aug 2018 #6
Good stuff. Read "1491" and "Guns, Germs, Steel"... marble falls Aug 2018 #7
Two excellent books! I also recommend them. Glorfindel Aug 2018 #10
Just what I was thinking 2naSalit Aug 2018 #12
Actually got my dad to read both of them. Diamonds got another book I can't rember it at ... marble falls Aug 2018 #16
Both good writers. 2naSalit Aug 2018 #17
I, too, have been meaning to read "Collapse." This will spur me to get it done! Glorfindel Aug 2018 #24
I was too. But for different reasons. I read Collapse first andthen 1491 and the Guns, Germs, Steel. marble falls Aug 2018 #28
Who did they steal that land from? HipChick Aug 2018 #8
"They" who? 2naSalit Aug 2018 #13
Driving through that area always gives me a weird feeling. Cracklin Charlie Aug 2018 #9
Seems cultural GeorgeGist Aug 2018 #11
White eyes Cryptoad Aug 2018 #14
Sadly, if Europeans had been humble and friendly we could have just asked about the history here. gtar100 Aug 2018 #15
You are right, gtar. The Spanish also burned thousands of codices in the Aztecs' library Nitram Aug 2018 #19
Comment in the book 1491 Marthe48 Aug 2018 #23
the book 1491 left-of-center2012 Aug 2018 #25
I read it about the same time Marthe48 Aug 2018 #30
Any relation to Edward Curtis the Photographer? druidity33 Aug 2018 #27
I don't think so Marthe48 Aug 2018 #29
So much left to learn about migration and settlement to the Western Hemisphere. Nitram Aug 2018 #18
When I read in the article of huge collections Marthe48 Aug 2018 #31
I understand the impulse. Schools should educate kids about the importance of keeping artifacts in Nitram Aug 2018 #32
Very cool! Thanks! nt CaptainTruth Aug 2018 #20
I've found several clovis arrowheads at my old middle school elmac Aug 2018 #21
I love Native history Bayard Aug 2018 #22
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