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250 years ago vast flocks of passenger pigeons flourished in North America, yet their bones are not often found in sites dating to a time before the arrival of Europeans. The only explanation can be that large Indian farming populations kept these competing seed-eaters scarce through deliberate extirpation, because once the Indians had been decimated by disease, the pigeon population exploded.

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250 years ago vast flocks of passenger pigeons flourished in North America, yet their bones are not often found in sites dating to a time before the arrival of Europeans. The only explanation can be that large Indian farming populations kept these competing seed-eaters scarce through deliberate extirpation, because once the Indians had been decimated by disease, the pigeon population exploded.

 

I keep waiting to hear something about Passenger pigeons that someone has extracted the DNA from a dead one and inserted it into an egg of a regular pigeon. Kind of like the wooly Mamoth thing. Recreate the pigeon. That be cool. I'd imagine they have the same problem as with the Wooly Mamoth incomplete DNA.

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