Passaïc Culture

The Passaïc Culture, named for its near the Passa River Bend, is an archæological culture of Great Kirav that flourished along the middle latitudes of the Eastern Seaboard between 6800 and 6500 BC. It represents one of the (perhaps precocious) flowerings of Mesolithic  on the continent, characterised by the low-intensisty cross-cultivation of  and.

During high modernity, ethnic romanticists writing in Kiravic claimed that the people of the Passaïc Culture were the direct cultural and genetic ancestors of the Kir people, though there is no clear scientific evidence of this. On the contrary, circumstantial evidence suggests that at least some communities participating in the Passaïc Culture spoke languages belonging to the Kuomo-Passaïc stock, with living relatives such as Kalvertan Coscivian, whereas Kiravic belongs to Kironic family of Trans-Kiravian stock.