El Hierro (Danish Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "El Hierro" in Danish language version.

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canaria.guide (Global: low place; Danish: low place)

eng.canaria.guide

  • 14 April 2020, eng.canaria.guide: The original inhabitants of the Canary Islands, backup Citat: "...The development of Guanches and its material equipment corresponded to the Stone Age...According to skeletal remains Guanches belonged to the europoid race. According to their pale skin and hair, it could be concluded that their ancestors were Berberians who had come here from nearby Morocco. This is confirmed by genetic studies, according to which there was the first settlement of the Canary Islands in sometime in the 1st millennium BC..."

eartharxiv.org (Global: low place; Danish: low place)

  • 2023, eartharxiv.org: Messages from the past; the petroglyphs of El Hierro Island, backup Citat: "...At the time of the European conquest, from the fifteenth century AD, the Canary Islands were inhabited by a variety of indigenous communities, often referred to as ‘the Guanches‘, although each island had a distinct aboriginal community, which also had distinct names for themselves...The pre-spanish aborigines of El Hierro are called the Bimbape (or Bimbache), and unfortunately after the conclusion of Spanish colonisation, only a limited number of remains were left of their civilization...In respect of the arrival of the aboriginal settlers, the assumed dates range from the first to the fifth centuries BC...In addition, Libyan-Berber script was found in a number of pre-Hispanic settlements on the Canary Islands...Regarding the Island of El Hierro, archaeological and anthropological research, dates the presence of the aboriginal population on El Hierro to at least the third century by dating organic remains through the 14C method..."

science.org (Global: 1,160th place; Danish: 1,174th place)

unesco.org (Global: 104th place; Danish: 86th place)

en.unesco.org

  • "Isla El Hierro Biosphere Reserve, Spain". unesco.org. 2003. Arkiveret fra originalen 7. marts 2023. Hentet 21. april 2023.

web.archive.org (Global: 1st place; Danish: 1st place)

  • "Isla El Hierro Biosphere Reserve, Spain". unesco.org. 2003. Arkiveret fra originalen 7. marts 2023. Hentet 21. april 2023.
  • 8 Feb 2024, science.org: A thousand years of solitude. How did the first human settlers of the Canary Islands survive a millennium of isolation?, backup Citat: "...Yet the first Canarians, who arrived from North Africa roughly 1800 years ago, survived and even thrived on this arid, windswept archipelago for 1000 years. They numbered in the tens of thousands when Europeans arrived at the start of the 14th century. Not long after, conquest and genocide had largely erased them as a people. But their DNA lives on in many islanders today..."
  • 2023, eartharxiv.org: Messages from the past; the petroglyphs of El Hierro Island, backup Citat: "...At the time of the European conquest, from the fifteenth century AD, the Canary Islands were inhabited by a variety of indigenous communities, often referred to as ‘the Guanches‘, although each island had a distinct aboriginal community, which also had distinct names for themselves...The pre-spanish aborigines of El Hierro are called the Bimbape (or Bimbache), and unfortunately after the conclusion of Spanish colonisation, only a limited number of remains were left of their civilization...In respect of the arrival of the aboriginal settlers, the assumed dates range from the first to the fifth centuries BC...In addition, Libyan-Berber script was found in a number of pre-Hispanic settlements on the Canary Islands...Regarding the Island of El Hierro, archaeological and anthropological research, dates the presence of the aboriginal population on El Hierro to at least the third century by dating organic remains through the 14C method..."
  • 14 April 2020, eng.canaria.guide: The original inhabitants of the Canary Islands, backup Citat: "...The development of Guanches and its material equipment corresponded to the Stone Age...According to skeletal remains Guanches belonged to the europoid race. According to their pale skin and hair, it could be concluded that their ancestors were Berberians who had come here from nearby Morocco. This is confirmed by genetic studies, according to which there was the first settlement of the Canary Islands in sometime in the 1st millennium BC..."