Phoenicians Niagara Ravine Tenerife After Ice Age Sailed Across Atlantic for Copper Around Newly Carved-Out Great Lakes

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The Niagara River below the Falls could certainly be called a ravine (a very large one ravaged by water), so that the tribe there which the French explorer Daniel de Champlain came upon whom he called the Neutrals who called themselves the Tobacco tribe may have named the ravine and falls Niagara after having come about 3,000 years previously across the Atlantic from Tenerife island of the Canary Islands where there is a ravine called the Niagara, those Canary Islanders (Phoenicians) having come across the Atlantic when the Ice Age had ended, when the newly formed Great Lakes became open to navigation, where on the south shore of Lake Superior vast copper deposits were exploited.