Its almost as if we don't have major digging projects or a permanent human population in Antarctica that would support this research?
Archive: https://archive.today/dy9pe
From the post:
>When the Spanish first reached the Andes, they found something surprising: Many of the locals had long, pointy heads. They discovered that the Collagua, an indigenous group in Peru that was conquered by the Inca, had a practice of shaping the head starting in infancy, before the skull bones fused and soft spots disappeared.
The Spanish jumped to the worst conclusions.
"They said it was this horrible thing and brains bled out of ears," Christina Torres, a bioarchaeologist at the University of California, Riverside, told Live Science. "But that doesn't seem to be the case."
Its almost as if we don't have major digging projects or a permanent human population in Antarctica that would support this research?
Archive: https://archive.today/dy9pe
From the post:
>>When the Spanish first reached the Andes, they found something surprising: Many of the locals had long, pointy heads. They discovered that the Collagua, an indigenous group in Peru that was conquered by the Inca, had a practice of shaping the head starting in infancy, before the skull bones fused and soft spots disappeared.
The Spanish jumped to the worst conclusions.
"They said it was this horrible thing and brains bled out of ears," Christina Torres, a bioarchaeologist at the University of California, Riverside, told Live Science. "But that doesn't seem to be the case."