LEGEND: 
Found - Dice and comb together:
 
                        COMB    DICE
Africa                 4            1
Mesopotamia    n.a.        3
Indus Valley       5            2

The Mesotamian comb is not shown
here but is discussed in literature.
The Mesopotamian-Indus Valley
connection is well attested to. 
Would it appear Africa was part?

Similar combs also found in:
New Zealand (6), Japan (7), and
the Russian Steppes (8). The
Indus Valley comb has the sun
sign still worn among the Mari
women today and occured as
far away as near Neolithic Moscow.
., art, art history, Paul Marc Washington, paleoneolithic@yahoo.com


While dug-out canoes were humankind's first ships, the sewed-plank ships began appearing in North Africa and Egypt near 6500 BC and soon became worldwide - likely with African ship-builders and crews in the earliest millennium.

Do the analogies in the pages below with their shared cultural toolkit reveal the existence of a single one worldwide culture with a seemingly common point of origin that through the demic movement of a people (like pursed-fingers parting) that became dispersed worldwide?

1) God created the heavens and earth: paleolithic to today: click.
2) Shamanism: paleolithic to today: click.
3) First cloth in world through neolithic spindles, whorls: Click.
4) Diadems as first crowns 25,000 years ago through historic times: click.
5) Rock art 1 - from 25,000 years ago until today: click.
6) Rock art 2 - red and black human figures in Africa and Eurasia: click.
7) Common hair care products – the comb: click.
8) Pyramids: click.
9) Neolithic pottery burials: click.
10) Board games part 1: click.
11) Board games part 2: click.
12) The dug-out canoe: click.
13) The plank boat: click.
14) The Adze: click.
15) 11 points of contact in ancient AfroEurasia: click.



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