Speaker
A lot of these pre-Clovis sites are really challenging the old guard notion of Clovis first, and this is another example of that, but he this researcher is approaching this in a different way that is really not giving... Other scientists don't like the way he's approaching this, so let's just talk about what it is. Yeah, the guy who this is all about and who wrote this paper, his name is Darren Lowry, and he's actually a geologist by training, but he calls himself an amateur archaeologist as well, because anybody who finds an artifact on the ground as a child or an adult calls himself an amateur archaeologist, which is super irritating to professional archaeologists. Now, that's not to take away from people who are, I would say, avocational archeologists. I don't like the term amateur archeologist. There's no, like, because I, you know, I don't know, took a sliver out the other day and maybe put a bandaid on, am I an amateur doctor? Like, does that make me an amateur doctor? No, it doesn't. Like, because I look at WebMD and, you know, diagnose myself, am I an amateur, you know, physician? No, I'm not. Because why are there amateur archeologists? That term really just, like, rose me the wrong way. I think that it's journalists that use that term more than the people himself. There's a lot of people out there that call themselves amateur archaeologists. Well, there are. But I don't think Darren Lowry is calling himself an amateur archaeologist. And he's got the chops, the academic chops behind him from his geology background to go past the amateur standing. This guy is really unique. Well, for geology he does.