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Sejarah Puak Navajo di Antelope Canyon -
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Antelope Canyon
GAMBAR menunjukkan pelancong dari Perancis, Sylvie Vincendet
merakamkan corak alunan pasir di 'Antelope Canyon', kawasan
penempatan puak Navajo di Page, Arizona.
Antelope Canyon is the most-visited and most-photographed slot canyon in the American Southwest. It is located on Navajo land near Page, Arizona. Antelope Canyon includes two separate, photogenic slot canyon sections, referred to individually as Upper Antelope Canyon or The Crack; and Lower Antelope Canyon or The Corkscrew.
The Navajo name for Upper Antelope Canyon is Tse' bighanilini, which means "the place where water runs through rocks." Lower Antelope Canyon is Hasdestwazi, or "spiral rock arches." Both are located within the LeChee Chapter of the Navajo Nation.
A beam of light in Upper Antelope Canyon
Antelope Canyon was formed by erosion of Navajo Sandstone, primarily due to flash flooding and secondarily due to other sub-aerial processes.
Rainwater, especially during monsoon season, runs into the extensive basin above the slot canyon sections, picking up speed and sand as it rushes into the narrow passageways.
Over time the passageways are eroded away, making the corridors deeper and smoothing hard edges in such a way as to form characteristic 'flowing' shapes in the rock.
Flooding in the canyon still occurs. A flood occurred on October 30, 2006 that lasted 36 hours, and caused the Tribal Park Authorities to close Lower Antelope Canyon for five months.
Inside Upper Antelope Canyon
Upper Antelope Canyon
Upper Antelope Canyon, called Tse bighanilini, "the place where water runs through rocks" by the Navajo, is located at [show location on an interactive map] 36 |
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navajo ni bahasa dia digunakan dlm kod rahsia mase WW2 dulu kan? |
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Kaum navajo ada menulis manuskrip berhubung UFO dan makhluk asing |
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Originally posted by super_nova at 25-12-2008 11:40 PM
navajo ni bahasa dia digunakan dlm kod rahsia mase WW2 dulu kan?
betul tu -
they used navajo code talker in wwii -
sebab ramai juga native american soldiers |
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Reply #3 WonBin's post
bagi link... |
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ingat film Windtalker lakonan nicholas cage dulu, memang best la perang2 dia tu |
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Originally posted by sekngucing at 26-12-2008 02:35 AM
ingat film Windtalker lakonan nicholas cage dulu, memang best la perang2 dia tu
ingat....
best cerita dia -
cerita john woo -
some john woo's stuff memang best -
depa guna navajo's code - |
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Originally posted by razhar at 26-12-2008 02:33 AM
bagi link...
Dalam X-Files kot? |
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Balas #9 naen\ catat
satu lagi kura2=keta kebal |
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Balas #13 naen\ catat
haha lawak2
-patutla dexa kata jahat mcm kambing rupanya kambing tu debe jadi jahat debe la |
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Originally posted by sekngucing at 31-12-2008 02:53 AM
haha lawak2
-patutla dexa kata jahat mcm kambing rupanya kambing tu debe jadi jahat debe la
percayalah... si naen tu... -
kambing sebenarnya tak debe sangat... -
errr...kadang2 aje.. tengok situasi -
navajo kata kambeng = samseng
memandai aje -
tapi.. yang debe ni.. - ramai budak2 kelantan
yang gedebe... eksyen aje lebih.. macam bagus..
err.. tak semua la (saya pun orang kelantan gak -
tapi.. yang baik2 punya... okay..) -
macam zed selalu sebut -
moral of the story.. -
kambeng is a nice animal.. dan comel dan
bijak semua.. kalau dia jadi samseng ke atau
debe ke... dia tak sengaja --
back to topic pula - pasal puak navajo ni -
kalau pergi belah2 south kat america - southwest
ramai la suku navajo kat situ --
kalau bahagian southeast macam kat south carolina
(kinda middle a bit) -- kat situ banyak suku sioux dan
apache juga -- |
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Balas #15 dexa\ catat
org sioux, apache, commanche, navajo semua ni asal mana? napa muka mcm org jepun tp kulit dia merah? |
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Balas #17 HangPC2\ catat
ye la, org eskimo ni pun, muka cam jepun sikit2. cmne asal mereka ya? |
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Reply #18 sekngucing's post
Dikatakan orang Eskimo ni berhijrah dari Siberia beribu-ribu tahun dulu...Dan mereka ni share same ancestor with Mongol and Korea peoples.. |
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Originally posted by sekngucing at 31-12-2008 01:28 PM
org sioux, apache, commanche, navajo semua ni asal mana? napa muka mcm org jepun tp kulit dia merah?
sioux ni dari dakota tribe -
ada kat minnesota - (indian community) -
tak banyak beza rupa sioux cree navajo -
tapi bahasa dan adat mereka sedikit lain
tu yang membezakan tribe tu -
comanche dari texas -
ada indian community - called
comanche county in texas -
why their skin is red - or similar to japanese or chinese -
this is the best answer i read - let's share it --
*************************************************************************************
Early Migration Routes
When humans first left Africa, they followed the coasts, where resources were abundant. The first wave moved across the Middle East, into southern Asia, and eventually all the way down to Australia [source: National Geographic]. This occurred roughly between 90,000 and 30,000 years ago [source: Haywood]. Additional waves of migration followed. Between 40,000 and 12,000 years ago, humans moved north into Europe. However, their range was limited by an ice sheet that extended into the northern part of continental Europe.
The icy conditions at the time also helped expand early humanity's territory. A massive sheet of ice, combined with lower sea levels, formed a bridge between Siberia and Alaska that we call Beringia. The first humans crossed over 30,000 years ago, moving down the west coast of North America [source: National Geographic]. Other sources suggest a more recent North American migration, starting about 15,000 years ago [source: Haywood]. New evidence seems to keep pushing the date of first North American habitation further and further back. Humans eventually spread into South America and pushed east into what is now the eastern United States and Canada. This theory of North America's settlement is supported by mtDNA evidence and a similarity in the dental structures of Siberian and North American populations of the era.
There have long been competing theories that early humans crossed the Atlantic Ocean, either from Africa to South America or the Caribbean, or from Europe to Greenland to North America. While it may have been possible to make such a trip using available seafaring technology, it is unlikely that a large-scale migration occurred in such a way.
The initial spread of humanity across the Earth was driven primarily by food and climate. Nomadic tribes of up to a few dozen people likely followed the migration patterns of the herd animals they hunted. Climate change opened new areas for hunting, even as technology such as mastery of fire and meat preserving allowed humans to live in less-than-ideal conditions. The human ability to adapt to new circumstances not only gave early humans an advantage over Homo erectus, it also facilitated global expansion.
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