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  1. Chiron

    Iron Revolution in Michigan 2500 BCE

    You make charcoal from trees, not coal, its completely different. Coal Regions of the US.
  2. Chiron

    Iron Revolution in Michigan 2500 BCE

    If they can get solid control of the Mississippi River Basin and have the institutional organization to utilize waterflow as the power source for tools, then yes.
  3. Chiron

    Iron Revolution in Michigan 2500 BCE

    Wiki has the coastline wrong. Humanity needed established food supplies to form cities and good water transport. Hence cities generally following the rivers and coasts where water can be had and fish caught. Farming most likely started with fruit orchards rather than grains which took time to...
  4. Chiron

    Iron Revolution in Michigan 2500 BCE

    But a higher population density raises the possibility of them creating their own bugs that infect Europe as well. Viral introductions can go both ways after all.
  5. Chiron

    Iron Revolution in Michigan 2500 BCE

    In the Neolithic Revolution Period, the coastline of Iraq was much farther north than it is today. The modern coastline only came into being around 500 BCE and it took several more centuries before it firmed up for Basra to be built. So Ur and Uruk were coastal cities, with Uruk being Venice...
  6. Chiron

    Iron Revolution in Michigan 2500 BCE

    Horses originated in the Americas and spread to Eurasia about 2.5mya but died out in the times of the Paleo-Indians in the Americas. Causes are not quite clear. Dogs are not large enough to be heavy draft animals and not really built for it either. Deer and Elk, tried it, well lets say Deer...
  7. Chiron

    Iron Revolution in Michigan 2500 BCE

    As the tin says: The Indigenous People of Michigan, here and after referred to as the Michiganders, use their established copper trade to begin mining the Iron Ore and Coal deposits of the Upper Peninsula in an organized way to create iron tools and maintain it to form an Iron Revolution...
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