Did the Hopewell Indian have an Hebrew alphabet?

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The Paleo-Hebrew alphabet:

The Bat Creek stone:
The two do look strikingly similar, but Paleo-Hebrew was used from 900BCE to 400BCE, and (quote from Wikipedia): --quote-- Radiocarbon dating of the (Bat Creek) wood spools returned a date of 32-769 A.D. --/quote-- Though I'm not a professional linguist or historian by any means, I will postulate that it is not uncommon for paleo- or proto-alphabets to look the same, as early writing systems all stemmed from pictures of objects, people and animals. Even our letter A is nothing but an upside-down bull head (as you can see, it has begun to turn sideways by Paleo-Hebrew). Naturally, therefore, Paleo-Hebrew and this alphabet found at Bat Creek might indeed be based upon the same objects and animals, therefore creating similar features.

But Native American languages and Hebrew have no common root, and cannot be related without some kind of contact in pre-history, and since technology at the time of Paleo-Hebrew did not allow for safe oceanic travel, I would assume that this did not occur.

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