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Experimental archaeologists completed a 45-hour canoe trip from Taiwan to Japan using only Paleolithic equipment.
Experiments and simulations show Paleolithic paddlers could outwit the powerful Kuroshio Current by launching dugout canoes ...
Japanese researchers turned to “experimental archaeology” to study how ancient humans navigated powerful ocean currents and ...
Researchers recreated a 30,000-year-old ocean journey from Taiwan to Japan using canoes and simulations to test early human ...
East Asian Paleolithic voyagers may have used dugout canoes to cross one of the strongest currents in the world.
Canoe is paddled 140 miles (225km) across the open sea The journey is from Taiwan to Japan’s Yonaguni Island Research is reminiscent of famed 1947 ...
In a new study, researchers reenacted how people in Taiwan might have reached the Ryukyu Islands tens of thousands of years ...
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Interesting Engineering on MSN30,000-year-old sea voyage recreated with canoe built using ancient stone toolsResearchers have explored how early modern humans migrated by sea from Taiwan to southern Japan approximately 30,000 years ...
The successfully re-enacted voyage suggests that early modern humans likely had a high level of strategic seafaring knowledge ...
Paddling over 45 hours across the open sea, the crew navigated using only the sun and stars to overcome the strong Kuroshio current.
Researchers used a canoe replica to trace Paleolithic migration from Taiwan to Japan, showing how early humans crossed seas ...
When and where the earliest modern human populations migrated and settled in East Asia is relatively well known. However, how ...
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