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by azakai 3487 days ago
Interesting, but do those holes and such survive the 11,000 years we are talking about here (as opposed to 2,000)? That's so much time it's hard to even imagine. Aside from gradual erosion and settling, wouldn't one major earthquake or flood wipe them out?
1 comments

I'm just shooting from the hip, but: Unless the posthole was actually on a fault line, there's no reason that an earthquake would wipe it out. The ground all moves together. Erosion & flooding can absolutely destroy them. But there's enough places that have been undisturbed since that time period.

When I was in Chengdu I visited Jinsha, which has lots of evidence of postholes: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jinsha_(archaeological_site) http://www.kaogu.cn/en/Chinese%20Archaeology/3/Discovery%20a... Granted, that's only 3000 years old.

A better example (which I just learned about-- I'm literally trying to google for the oldest post holes found :) ) is Monte Verde: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monte_Verde

> Radiocarbon dating of bones and charcoal in 1982 gave the site an average age of 14,800 years ago (calibrated), more than 1000 years earlier than the oldest-known site of human habitation in the Americas at that time.[2][8][9]

> In the initial excavation, two large hearths were found and many small ones as well. The remains of local animals were found, in addition to wooden posts from approximately twelve huts.