Re: The lowly sweet potato may unlock America's past, How the root vegetable found it's way across the Pacific



On Mar 28, 11:17 am, Peter Alaca <p.al...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Jack Linthicum wrote: on, 28/03/2008 16:12:
On Mar 28, 11:08 am, Peter Alaca <p.al...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Inger E. J wrote: on, 28/03/2008 15:31:
"Jack Linthicum" <jacklinthi...@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> skrev i meddelandet
news:f8e93b60-d8fb-4947-aca1-1f2f7be6f562@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Mar 28, 10:02 am, Peter Alaca <p.al...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Jack Linthicum wrote: on, 28/03/2008 12:33:
On Mar 27, 4:46 pm, George <gbl...@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Mar 28, 7:53 am, Jack Linthicum <jacklinthi...@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
That sounds like Blue of Capricorn. You have never read it, have you?
And nor have I
Fiction isn't a good reference point for any subject
I wonder if you knew how much fiction must go into every
archaeological report if you would hold that view?
Have you ever read an archaeological report?
Yes.
Has Peter A read one?
Peter has written one.

While you were cataloging the elements of your work did you
hypothecize on what the various discoveries relationships were, to
each other and to the larger overview?

Or just catalog and record?

Sometimes there is an attempt to interpretate the findings
That is not fiction.

--
p.a.

That is fiction.

Anything that is invented or imagined, especially a prose narrative.
Although fiction may be based on actual events or personal
experiences, its characters and settings are invented. ...
library.thinkquest.org/23846/library/terms/index.html
.



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