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他们相信,中国人比哥伦布先到
Tampa Wild Rice
It interviews many researchers in the United States and records their firm research and reasoning on "the Chinese came to the Americas first". This is a cross-border ideological adventure note that challenges historical conclusions. In early 2020, the author received an invitation from Douglas Preston, chairman of the Writers Guild of America, to go to the United States to interview more than a dozen researchers who firmly believe that "the Chinese arrived (in America) before Columbus" - including historians, archaeologists, geological geographers, architecture professors, NASA engineers, American veterans of World War II, and descendants of missionaries whose ancestors and fathers lived in China. They believe that Columbus, who crossed the Atlantic in 1492 and thought he had reached India, was definitely not the first person to "discover" the American continent. These doubters wrote books or articles based on their own research and reasoning. They firmly believed that in addition to the Chinese with ancient advanced civilization and technology, Polynesians, Phoenicians, Greeks, ancestors from Southeast Asia and South Pacific islands had crossed the sea many times to the Americas thousands of years ago. This book is the author's interview notes with these researchers.
It interviews many researchers in the United States and records their firm research and reasoning on "the Chinese came to the Americas first". This is a cross-border ideological adventure note that challenges historical conclusions. In early 2020, the author received an invitation from Douglas Preston, chairman of the Writers Guild of America, to go to the United States to interview more than a dozen researchers who firmly believe that "the Chinese arrived (in America) before Columbus" - including historians, archaeologists, geological geographers, architecture professors, NASA engineers, American veterans of World War II, and descendants of missionaries whose ancestors and fathers lived in China. They believe that Columbus, who crossed the Atlantic in 1492 and thought he had reached India, was definitely not the first person to "discover" the American continent. These doubters wrote books or articles based on their own research and reasoning. They firmly believed that in addition to the Chinese with ancient advanced civilization and technology, Polynesians, Phoenicians, Greeks, ancestors from Southeast Asia and South Pacific islands had crossed the sea many times to the Americas thousands of years ago. This book is the author's interview notes with these researchers.