>>8312885>coinkydinksYou mean probability? Like being in a classroom of 30 students where 2 people will share teh same birthdate?
Ain't fate. It's math.
>Again, you can't expect everything to be preserved.It's one thing for the dates to be lost, it's another for the animals that were found to be... or the plants to be lost, pottery/helmets/dresses/weapons to be lost, the boasting to be lost, the tapestrys/paintings/writings to be lost, and the fact that mountains of trash left behind by the thousands of explorers to be wiped away in dozens/hundreds of locations. Nevermind that if the Chinese actually made contact with any of the higher civilized tribes, there would be writing about them. Maybe Quataerqtezktzwq might have been a real person that they just called a god for some reason, but he left from a different ocean and was only a single person to boot.
There's just way too many people involved in a Chinese expedition for records to be lost. If they kept writings about the Africa, middle east, and other south pacific endeavors, why would only the America writings/arts not be preserved?
Suddenly you need to believe in a conspiracy was created to shut the mouth up of every sailor, scientists/observers, and accountant/record keeper that went on the voyage. Thousands and thousands of people... if you were to believe in a 15 century voyage, which would unlikely survive the trip JUST getting TO the Americas. Pre-15th like the writings you think are evidence? Impossible.
>And maybe they were.They weren't. Even Columbus had to try hard to justify how the Americas weren't Americas, AND that didn't stop a dozen or so men of a crew of 90 to actually recognize it was a new place.
Pic's how close the continents used to be millions of years ago and why animals could survive crossing the smaller seas.