Anonymous ID: 837cc7 July 9, 2021, 9:34 a.m. No.14087693   🗄️.is 🔗kun

A historic canoe was discovered on a wild SC river. How did it get there?

 

The roar of whitewater rapids was about all anyone could hear as a small group of canoeists maneuvered down the Chattooga River, enjoying the mountain scenery of the southern Appalachians along the South Carolina-Georgia border.

 

But as they neared a calm spot in the river, something caught their eye. It was an odd-looking piece of wood, resting near the river bank. After careful inspection, the boaters realized they had found a piece of history: A weathered canoe, replete with the markings of a past era.

 

“It was exciting to find that,’’ said Bettina George, one of the group members on the trip late last fall.

 

This week, with water levels suitable to recover the craft, a conservation group pulled the old canoe from the Chattooga and is preparing to haul it to a place where the vessel can be put on public display.

 

Sammy Fretwell

Fri, July 9, 2021, 6:34 AM

The roar of whitewater rapids was about all anyone could hear as a small group of canoeists maneuvered down the Chattooga River, enjoying the mountain scenery of the southern Appalachians along the South Carolina-Georgia border.

 

But as they neared a calm spot in the river, something caught their eye. It was an odd-looking piece of wood, resting near the river bank. After careful inspection, the boaters realized they had found a piece of history: A weathered canoe, replete with the markings of a past era.

 

“It was exciting to find that,’’ said Bettina George, one of the group members on the trip late last fall.

 

This week, with water levels suitable to recover the craft, a conservation group pulled the old canoe from the Chattooga and is preparing to haul it to a place where the vessel can be put on public display.

 

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Those who’ve examined the canoe, including archaeologists at the University of South Carolina, say the boat could be 200 to 250 years old. It’s a potentially significant discovery that could provide insight on what life was like in the late 1700s, according to USC and the Chattooga Conservancy, the public interest group that led efforts to save the canoe.

 

If the canoe’s age is verified through radiocarbon testing, it would mark one of the few times a canoe that old has been found along the Chattooga, a federally designated wild and scenic river in the mountains northwest of Anderson.

 

Most ancient canoes that have been discovered in South Carolina have been found in the Lowcountry, said James Spirek, the state’s underwater archaeologist.

 

“Up in the mountains on the rivers, they’re a little rare,’’ he said. “It’s interesting to find people were using canoes on some of these wild rivers.’’

 

The canoe, discovered below Sandy Ford between two major rapids on the Oconee County, SC, side of the Chattooga, bears some similarities to a 1740s-era boat found in the river 17 years ago.

 

At about two-feet wide, the latest find is quite narrow and may have been used to ferry early settlers or American Indians across the Chattooga, instead of running its whitewater rapids like boats do today.

 

The newest find, however, is about 10 feet shorter than the one discovered in 2004 and it is cruder in its construction, said Spirek, a University of South Carolina archaeologist who has seen the canoe.

 

An iron hatchet or ax was used to hollow out the canoe, meaning it likely was constructed after Europeans arrived in the southeast, said Spirek and Buzz Williams, a mountain conservationist who helped pull the boat from the Chattooga. Williams said a nail was also found in one end of the canoe.

 

“We know it’s historic,’’ Spirek said. “We can clearly see the tool marks.’’

 

A key question is whether the canoe was built by early colonial settlers or American Indians. Centuries ago, the area was populated by the Cherokees, the Native American people who developed villages not far from the river.

 

While boaters found the canoe last fall in a calm spot far from the river’s head waters, Spirek said “it probably had been tumbling down the Chattooga for some time. I’m sure it’s not at its original location.’’

 

The Chattooga River, in the northwest corner of South Carolina and northeast Georgia, is widely known as a whitewater rafting destination because of its extensive rapids. It gained national attention in the 1970s as the site where the movie “Deliverance’’ was filmed.

 

Williams, who founded the Chattooga Conservancy, said he’s delighted with the discovery and the support in the community for saving it.

 

more

https://www.yahoo.com/news/historic-canoe-discovered-wild-sc-133459130.html

Anonymous ID: 837cc7 July 9, 2021, 10:02 a.m. No.14087830   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7841 >>7849

>>14087801

>SALT

CIA

 

The Salt Pit and Cobalt are the code names of an isolated clandestine CIA black site prison and interrogation center in Afghanistan.[1][2] It is located north of Kabul and was the location of a brick factory prior to the Afghanistan War. The CIA adapted it for illegal detention.

 

In the winter of 2005, the Salt Pit became known to the general public because of two incidents. In 2011, the Miami Herald indicated that the Salt Pit was the same facility that Guantanamo Bay detainees referred to as the dark prison[3][4]—a fact subsequently confirmed in the CIA torture report.[5]

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_Pit

 

How many in the media are CIA?

Who controls the media?

Still think there is a link to George Soros with Grain of Salt.

Anonymous ID: 837cc7 July 9, 2021, 10:09 a.m. No.14087872   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7891

>>14087849

There are a few drops with salt. (Huber is from Salt Lake…)

 

This one is also interesting.

 

3619

Q !!mG7VJxZNCI 11/21/2019 22:18:33

 

>>7359354

Images that are served via TOR broke yesterday, we are checking why and should have it fixed up soon.

Caching is still a bit buggy, and likewise we should have that fixed up soon.

I will do my best to have these things fixed up before the end of the weekend.

 

An easy way to verify yourself after the upcoming salt rotation is:

  1. Migrate /patriotsfight/ before the rotation

  2. Post with current tripcode on /patriotsfight/

  3. After salt rotation, post with new tripcode on /patriotsfight/

  4. Qresearch BO adds your updated tripcode to the /qresearch/ whitelist

 

Let me know if you want to migrate /patriotsfight/. The login credentials will be the same as back in August, and you can login via tor at this url:

https://sys.jthnx5wyvjvzsxtu.onion/mod.php?/

or via clearnet at this url:

https://sys.jthnx5wyvjvzsxtu.onion/mod.php?/

 

The salt rotation is an important maintenance task, and will help improve overall site stability.

 

Our current tasks to get back to full stability:

  1. Salt rotation

  2. Fix quality-of-life bugs (caching, images, etc)

  3. Launch project odin (checkmate against deplatforming)

  4. Finish board migration

  5. Migrate to a new ISP currently being setup (will improve site access speeds and stability)

  6. Bring back board creation (with a simple vetting process)

  7. Install the new captcha system that we are building

  8. Extinguish fires that pop up

 

>>7359370

/pf/ was taken down [cleared of content] just prior to platform TERM [specific reason].

NAT SEC [charter] prevents use of 'keys' to establish IDEN via public utility/domain - non_reg.

Formation of 'clean' board possible to lock in trip(s) issues w/ safeguards.

Q