Yes, there were earthquakes in mesoamerica prior to colonization; region was full of scribes, incl women, who wrote about them in detail.
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Back to earthquakes, though. You can see the effect of the Puebla/Morelos earthquake in Mexico City's Xochimilco:https://twitter.com/conecora1/status/910217949591502849?lang=en …
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It looks scary. It is scary. But you can see how people are riding out the waves from the earthquake, which was epicentered 75 miles away.
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Because they couldn't respect indigenous knowledge, The Spanish drained Lake Texcoco; *they* decided to build on volcanic, unstable soil.
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I've been under the weather and was moving fast in my previous colonization/earthquake thread. I did have some mistakes. But....
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Several people have responded that the Aztecs were the ones who were so backward, they built on Lake Texcoco. They're missing the point.
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You wanna correct me/mention that Lake Texoco was saltwater? That there was more than one lake, several were freshwater? Cool. Please do.
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But stay out of my mentions if you're only here to make the point that Spanish colonization was somehow a great thing for progress.
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Colonization is, quite literally, the foundation on which environmental degradation is built.
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End of conversation
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That’s cool
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