12-11-2025, 12:30 AM
I was surprised really.
So much effort has been diverted from the archeology beneath the US citizens' very feet that I still find it "news" to be reminded that the people here were impressively capable masters of their environment.
I didn't expect that some ancient canoes uncovered in Wisconsin has been dated that far back.
Archaeologists Found 16 Ancient Canoes Beneath a Wisconsin Lake, Some Older Than the Pyramids
Reportedly, the canoes were part of 'fleet' of canoes - the area was a 'marina' of sorts... in use for an amazingly long time...
Nice.
So much effort has been diverted from the archeology beneath the US citizens' very feet that I still find it "news" to be reminded that the people here were impressively capable masters of their environment.
I didn't expect that some ancient canoes uncovered in Wisconsin has been dated that far back.
Archaeologists Found 16 Ancient Canoes Beneath a Wisconsin Lake, Some Older Than the Pyramids
Reportedly, the canoes were part of 'fleet' of canoes - the area was a 'marina' of sorts... in use for an amazingly long time...
Quote:....
A Prehistoric Marina
The fleet found in Lake Mendota is striking in its diversity and age. The vessels range from 700 to 5,200 years old. To put that in perspective, the oldest canoe was carved from red oak around 3000 B.C.—roughly the same time ancient Sumerians were inventing writing and centuries before the Egyptians laid the first stone of the Great Pyramid of Giza.
“Constructed of red oak, it is now the oldest dugout canoe recorded from the Great Lakes region,” Tamara Thomsen, Wisconsin’s state maritime archaeologist, told Fox News Digital. She notes that it is likely the third-oldest canoe ever found in eastern North America.
Archaeologists believe this site served as a busy transit hub. Ancient travelers would paddle across the lake, dock their canoes near a network of trails, and continue their journey on foot. Today, the canoes sit under about 8 meters (26 feet) of water, but millennia ago, this spot was a shallow shoreline about 1.2 meters deep, ideal for parking a boat.
“It’s a parking spot that’s been used for millennia, over and over,” Thomsen said in an interview with the Associated Press.
...
Nice.






