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Re: Alternative histories and paralele universes

From:Carlos Thompson <chlewey@...>
Date:Monday, January 4, 1999, 5:09
Hawksinger wrote:

> Carlos Thompson wrote: > > > greath cultures but forgot the rol of burden animals. Of course, aft=
er I have
> > an *what if* situation and a conworld, I'll put these new elements in=
the pot.
> > One thing to remember is that there are a lot of animals that went > extinct ca. 12,000 BP. Just keep a few around, such as horses, > mastodons, zebras (yes, Equus simplicidens), etc. Keep the existing > camelids or add a few of the larger extinct varieties, caribou a la > reindeer, domesticate any of a number of swine, capybara, etc. > Some of these have modern relatives that are resistant to domestication=
> but given time, will, and the what-if factor, there are/were plenty of > candidates for domesticated species.
Not to mention rodents and goats. Well I think not all horses where hunt= ed and some were tamed. Also some bisons. Probably mastodonts remaind wild... until= a short period prior Europeans arrival.
> > that would have helped where bisons lived. One of todays most fertil=
regions in
> > the world is the middle USA, I think if the propper conditions of a b=
ig river,
> > domesticated bisons (buffalo), fertil land and enough people, an cult=
ure could
> > have developed. > > Several did, the Adena, the Natchez for example. One of my first > projects was for a group that never got a name of their own, I just > called them the Mississippi River Empire (MRE). That name survives > today as the Mr=E9, last great enemy of the Nowans and largest city > in Nowapan.
Actually I was thinking on Mississippi as one of the two ancient cultures= =2E
> > rudimentary wheels. > > I agree with this one, but there have been a few cases > where wheel use has diminished with the introduction of camels, sorry, > don't remember the name of a very interesting book.
Well, I wasn't thinking of well as a decicing factor but after know I'm t= hinking on domesticated surviving horses... I'll give it a second thought.
> Have the conquistadors go the other way. Maybe some nice Aztecs runnin=
g
> amuck in Europe. I read an alternative history novel a few years ago > that had Cortez switching allegiance, helping the Aztecs, who eventuall=
y
> became the most powerful nation on earth. Only published in England > I believe, and of course, I don't remember its title either.
Well. actually in the history, the Hangkerim people send ships to fight = in Europe and even bombed some ports. But they didn't wanted to invade so the ships ca= me back (I mean during the Europeans invasion, Hangkerim has take themselves away fo= rm the internal conflicts in Europe a la WWI).
> PS, How should one pronounce 'Chlewey' and where does the name come > from??
Chlewey is /xlju:i/ or /kljuwi/ and comes from Carlos Eugenio playing wit= h languages and letters. -- o_o =3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D= =3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3Dw=3D=3D=3Dw=3D=3D=3D=3D####### Chlewey Thompin ## #### http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/9028/ ## ## ## ------------------------------------------------##-## ## ### - =BFPor qu=E9 no? - No tiene sentido. - =BFQu=E9 sentido? El sentido no existe. - El sentido inverso. O el sentido norte. El sentido com=FAn, tal ve= z. O sin sentido, como aqu=ED. (-- Graeville 2)