User:Kir/Bandsox
Prehistory and Peopling of Great Kirav
The distant past of Great Kirav is steeped in mythology and remains obscure. Archæological evidence suggest that the region may have been inhabited by moern man as early as 22,000 years ago, and subsequently beset with multiple waves of migration that have left enduring genetic, archæological, and cultural imprints on the island continent. The bulk of the genetic heritage of Kiravian peoples is attributable to an Ice Age migration from Levantia made possible by lower sea levels and dense floes of pack ice, with later contributions from the Ʒ-Q transoceanic migration and the still-unaccounted for progenitors of Haplogroup Ȼ.
Unravelling the truth of Kiravian prehistory and dark history is complicated by Coscivian culture's schizo-sacramentalist conception of reality (which does not clearly distinguish between what Occidental cultures would regard as the symbolic and the real) and its unique approach to time (which is often reflected in non-linear narratives and the confounding expression of temporal processes in spatial or virtual terms).
Pre-Human Times
[Dino lore]
Much of Great Kirav's plant biodiversity dates from clades attested from the Carboniferous through Permian periods.
Rattusfuckus; [Retarded Plesiosaur national dino here]
[Yeti and Samsquanch]
Earliest Homonids
During the late 20th century AD, palæontologists unearthed skeletal remains of archæic humans present in Great Kirav during the middle Pleistocene, which were eventually concluded to represent two distinct species. The more anatomically archæic of the two, Homo vetus montanus, appear to have been sluggish, shuffling creatures; dull but hardy tundra-dwellers with a robust physique and limited cognitive and linguistic capabilities compared to the more anatomically "modern" H. darudensis. Although direct evidence is lacking, most palæontologists find it probable that both species were more hirsute than modern man, with ample body hair aiding their survival in the glaciated conditions of Pleistocene Kirav.
First Humans - Ice Bridges from Demomap
The present accepted consensus regarding the colonisation of Great Kirav by Homo sapiens sapiens maintains that the island continent was first peopled by a founder population of marine mammal hunters originating from the north-central Levantine mainland who migrated across pack ice in pursuit of prey until eventually reaching pockets of unglaciated land (now likely submerged) along the ancient southern and southwestern shores of Great Kirav. This theory is colloquially known as the "iceberg-hopping thesis" (Coscivian: xistoīoribakursa). This migration is believed to have occurred sometime between 19,500 BC and 18,500 BC, though the lower bound of this window is not definite and the upper bound could be as late as the first abrupt rise in global sea levels around 18,000-17,500 BC.
Dark historians generally identify the homeland of the Ice Age Levantine migrants with the mythological concept of Demomap. Although variously interpretable from the oral traditions of Coscivian and Urom communities as a place, time, or abstract state of being, Kapuśitic and Cuomo-Passaic-speaking peoples present Demomap as the intermediate location of their ancestors between their emergence from the Shadow Realm and their arrival in Kam, interpretable either as the physical world at large or Great Kirav specifically.[1] As such, the hypothesised pre-migration prehistory of the proto-Kiravians is known as the 'Demomappic Period'. The proto-Kiravians of the Demomappic Period are associated with a particular lithic technique (examples of which are portrayed here) with examples known from both Ilánova and Kubagne, Yonderre, cited as the strongest archæological evidence of the iceberg-hopping hypothesis. During the Demomappic Period, the proto-Kiravians are currently believed to have interacted economically and reproductively with the Packer culture of the Vandarch Basin but remained culturally distinct therefrom.
Primitive Period - Cold and also Dark
The era of human habitation of Great Kirav from initial migration to the mid 12th millennium BC, a range of roughly seven thousand years, is known as the Primitive Period. [The Glacier and its lasting psychic effects]
The human population of Great Kirav prior to the last glacial retreat is presumed to have been extremely sparse. Some studies from the 1980s-90s AD suggested that the Archæo-Cronan and Archæo-Levantine founder populations may have numbered as few as 70 and 100 people respectively. More recent works accept figures higher up in the hundreds or even low thousands as plausible, with the caveat that the vast majority of migrants' genetic lineages became extinct during the Primitive Period and are not ancestral to modern Kiravians.
Society I (ca. 12,500 BC - ca. 9600 BC) - We Live in This
Pleistocene-Holocene Collapse - Gamers Strike Back
Society II (ca. 9300 BC - ca. 8000 BC)
Akai Collapse (ca. 8000 BC)
Deep History (ca. 7000 BC - 2373 BC)
Wanderer Migration (The D)
[Haplogroup D? (Mystery haplogroup)]
Haplogroup D is clustered in modern Coscivian ethnic groups and areas of historic Coscivian influence. Among Urom populations in Great Kirav, frequency ranges from 5% in some boreal forest tribes to 0% in high-altitude Western Highlands tribes. However, it occurs at low frequencies across much of the globe, making its origins difficult to pinpoint.
Y-Chromosomal Waldo is the name given to the unknown prehistoric man who is the common ancestor of all living men in Haplogroup D. Where's Waldo? Theories: Waldo is in Demomap (Y-chromosomal Waldo lived in Boreal Levantia somewhere, probably modern Faneria), Waldo on Ice (Y-chromosomal Waldo lived in some fluke glacial refugium on the Arctic landmass), Wet Waldo (Waldo migrated from Polynesia somehow - Controversial).
[Dark philology]
Open Problems
Much remains unanswered about Kiravian prehistory, and naturally many questions may remain unknown forever. Major open problems in Kiravian prehistory that are the subject of active scholarly inquiry include:
Post-Glacial First Contact - Approximately when after the glacial retreat was contact reëstablished between human populations in Great Kirav and Levantia? Leading Dark philologists believe that their discipline cannot supply an answer to this question, save for the remote possibility of new evidence being decoded from as-of-yet undeciphered or undiscovered epigraphs, as existing recensions of oral histories covering this topic have all been adapted for post-contact audiences taking knowledge of other continents as a given, so the time depth of this is basically impossible to sound. Archæological evidence does not yet provide a clear answer, but there are some promising leads.
Where's Waldo - Where did Y-chromosomal Waldo, progenitor of Haplogroup D, live, and how did his descendants get to Great Kirav? No one has a clue.
Related
Deep Philology & Dark Philology
Five Races Cycle
Coscivian Origin Narratives
Kiro-Akai Hyperwar
Phantom Time
Shadow Realm
Shadow Time and Dream Time
Slash Noïnclude
Palæo-Cronan Haplotypes:
- Haplogroyup Ʒ
- Haplogroup
Palæo-Levantine Haplotypes:
- Haplogroup Ƕ
- Haplogroup Ỽ
Antediluvian Arctic Haplotypes:
- Haplogroup Ȼ
Form I - istuv | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Case | Nonplural | Plural | ||
Ergative | istuk | istuyak | ||
Genitive | istul | istuyá | ||
Indirect | istum | istuyam | ||
Absolutives | ||||
Number | Nonplural | Plural | ||
Aspect | Imperfect | Perfect | Imperfect | Perfect |
Present | istuv | istuvi | istuya | istuyi |
Past | istuve | istuvéi | istuyave | istuyavéi |
Future | istuvo | istuvói | istuyavo | istuyavói |
Jussive | istuvu | istuvúi | istuyavu | istuyavúi |
Form II - rona | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Case | Nonplural | Plural | ||
Ergative | ronak | ronæk | ||
Genitive | roná | ronæ | ||
Indirect | ronam | ronám | ||
Absolutives | ||||
Number | Nonplural | Plural | ||
Aspect | Imperfect | Perfect | Imperfect | Perfect |
Present | rona | ronavi | ronáv | ronávi |
Past | ronave | ronavéi | ronáve | ronávéi |
Future | ronavo | ronavói | ronávo | ronávói |
Jussive | ronavu | ronavúi | ronávu | ronávúi |
Form III - vālin | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Case | Nonplural | Plural | ||
Ergative | vālith | vālinyak | ||
Genitive | vālisk | vāliskya | ||
Indirect | vālint | vālintya | ||
Absolutives | ||||
Number | Nonplural | Plural | ||
Aspect | Imperfect | Perfect | Imperfect | Perfect |
Present | vālin | vālini | vālinyav | vālinyavi |
Past | vāline | vālinéi | vālinyave | vālinyavéi |
Future | vālino | vālinói | vālinyavo | vālinyavói |
Jussive | vālinu | vālinúi | vālinyavu | vālinyavúi |
Form III - kenor | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Case | Nonplural | Plural | ||
Ergative | kenorth | kenoryak | ||
Genitive | kenorsk | kenorskya | ||
Indirect | kenord | kenordya | ||
Absolutives | ||||
Number | Nonplural | Plural | ||
Aspect | Imperfect | Perfect | Imperfect | Perfect |
Present | kenor | kenorsti | kenoryav | kenoryavi |
Past | kenorste | kenorstéi | kenoryave | kenoryavéi |
Future | kenorsto | kenorstói | kenoryavo | kenoryavói |
Jussive | kenorstu | kenorstúi | kenoryavu | kenoryavúi |