>high rainfall>mountain cradle/valley>coastal>on peninsula guarded by desert + mountains at the top>secondary mountain wall right before high rain areaIts Rome+Xian, there should have been a (relative to americas) giant civi here, it ought to be essay atlantis.Was there?
Yes? Are you retarded?
>>18512883Look at the arrow, I don't mean Mexico generally, I mean the tip of southern Baja in that valley.
Mexico is way rainier than culture leads you on, I was reading Cormac McCarthy's border trilogy and he had all these rainy mexico chapters and it really took me back
no. how could there be? you need to cross either the sea (which indians could not reliably do) or the whole peninsula to get there. even nowadays it's completely empty and the economy is based on tourism because there's not much else to do.
>>18512876ACCESS IS DIFFICULT, AND IT IS TINY, WHICH IS WHY IT IS VIRTUALLY DESERTED; IN THE NINETEEN HUNDRED FORTIES THERE WAS AN ATTEMPT TO CIVILIZE THAT MICROREGION, BUT IT FAILED, BECAUSE IT IS TOO ISOLATED TO SUSTAIN ANYTHING LARGER THAN A TOWN.
>>18512876the natives there didnt have agriculture yet like the natives of alta california even though the pima are "right" next door so weird how agriculture never penetrated california except for tobacco cultivation even though the colorado river civs did have three sisters. i guess tribes just really didnt want to cross the mojave.
>>18512876>freezes your shit upNothing personel:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lMrK4_3aoU0
>>18513106Agriculture needs more than just good weather to develop, the enviroment needs to be tough enough to force the local inhabitants to find ways to grow their own food, rather than just live off hunting and gathering forever.
>>18513065Interesting
>>18512876Bahia Concepcion and Mulege mogs cabo in every way