That kind of stuff is fascinating. People all over the world invented, forgot, reinvented, etc technology all the time at completely different times in history.
First I've heard of them. Pretty interesting.
Check this out:
The earliest sails were not made from canvas but from woven grass, which had to be dipped in tannins in order to be toughened up. This resulted in a reddish-brown hue, which was carried on when canvas masts were invented. The bright crimson masts seen in Hong Kong’s harbor today still bear this historical hallmark.
My brain can only go "well, the ancient human manager probably didn't appreciate the worker invented iron metallurgy, fired them, and set civilization back 400 years" and gets frustrated
"Iron working was introduced to Europe in the late 11th century BC, probably from the Caucasus, and slowly spread northwards and westwards over the succeeding 500 years."
"Some recent studies date the inception of iron metallurgy in Africa between 3000 and 2500 BCE."
They really think they did everything first.
That kind of stuff is fascinating. People all over the world invented, forgot, reinvented, etc technology all the time at completely different times in history.
Humans can be smart af.
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That's a great example! I like looking at the different challenges cultures had when they created the same type of tech.
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First I've heard of them. Pretty interesting.
Check this out:
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My brain can only go "well, the ancient human manager probably didn't appreciate the worker invented iron metallurgy, fired them, and set civilization back 400 years" and gets frustrated