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#advanced ancient civilization
ancientorigins · 1 year
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Some of the strangest out of place artifacts – OOPArts - are the ones that have allegedly been found enclosed in coal or stone. It is natural to wonder; how did seemingly modern artifacts get into pieces of coal millions of years old?
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Nineveh was Jacksonville, Florida
Nineveh was Jacksonville, Florida
Nineveh was Jacksonville, Florida was first reveled to me by Neophyte Dag on YouTube from his video, entitled, “The Black Messiah Prince Lewis and the Black 144,000 Saints Elect part 3: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nWWxZaQAe6g. The above video shows you map comparisons of the State of Florida to Assyria and Babylon. In this post is the same map comparison for your own viewing convenience. As…
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mememan93 · 11 months
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Zonai? you mean walking retcons?
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ambientbroth · 1 year
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Long post!
I do not understand how so many people are willing to dismiss the ideas of Graham Hancock’s because he call’s out modern archeology academias & Joe Rogan was sprinkled in the Netflix series Ancient Apocalypse
When we think about the oldest religion being Hinduism and they’re advanced ancient knowledge on the age of the universe and very specific cycles they uncovered were exceptionally precise - how is it we only now discovered they’re calculations true and still call ancient people simple/ uncivilized humans.
When we know the importance of astronomy to ancient human’s. How people navigated the seas using the stars as maps, how civilizations took astronomy seriously, how often they studied them, it’s not a coincidence so many cultures studied the stars and have standing evidence preserved of the same studies - why is archeology so quick to dismiss astronomy when viewing ancient sites?
When we know mythology, lore, and the power of story telling. We know the influence these stories carry for thousands of years passed on to this day. Modern day academia will not listen to the people of the land. Story telling becomes extremely skewed or forgotten due to unimportance.(I know Graham Hancock got some of these stories grossly inaccurate, he’s not a savior)
Graham Hancock only offers suggestion and a different view on the massive evidence of a missing time period we choose not to acknowledge. He’s not saying he’s 100% right, even the stories he reiterates are grossly simplified to match some of his ideologies (he’s not the only one to do that). He’s offering an open minded story of something that could have been very real. There’s too much evidence in our modern world to try to dismiss any discovery we do not yet understand.
If we do not fully understand something we cannot just keep dismissing ideas. That doesn’t do anything good. It doesn’t preserve anything. It doesn’t progress us to keep it in a box.
Paleontology proves to us, with every new discovery, that our original idea on dinosaurs were wrong! Because that’s what science is - it’s expanding the view of the world.
We know the historical discoveries/inventions/ideas, made by minorities, have been taken from them and skewed/killed/buried/paid off - over time to shine light on terrible people. This story is not uncommon to humanity.
The day people of the world realize that we know nothing of the world will be the day that humanity expands. If humanity only decides to go with “what we know” that’s a limited box. Archeologist, scientist, historians, medical, astronomers - they have ALL been wrong before. It’s is so crazy to believe we are at “the pinnacle” of all modern knowledge. WE KNOW NOTHING.
New article discoveries about ancient humans come out everyday. A more recent one I read was about a very prehistoric skeleton that showed evidence of a very modern surgical amputation practice that was thought to not have existed in that time period and if it was the likelihood of survival was remarkable. On top of this discovery they noted that this amputation was eariler in this human’s life (childhood) and the human survived his full life time with this amputation, meaning there was disabled assistance - which was thought to have not been a common behavior with ancient humans.
The reason I bring up this article is because we truly do not know anything about our prehistory and it’s a progressive attitude to consider humanity has been far more advance than we give credit to. There is a reason to put time and effort into the idea that there was a advanced anxiety civilization. It’s only now “crazy” to observe and talk against things that do not add up and call them conspiracies. In history some conspiracies are/were proven right, it just needed more investigation.
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autismmydearwatson · 1 year
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Why is the idea of ancient Egyptian people being Black so hard to understand. Point to where Egypt is on a map, I assure you it is not in Europe or Asia.
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its-hell · 1 year
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cactus ⇢ something you’re currently learning (about)?
papyrus ⇢ if you put your ‘on repeat’ playlist on shuffle, what’s the first song that comes up? what do you like about it / associate it with?
For the ask game :)
Hi! Thanks for the ask. How are you??
Cactus - right now I'm doing corrections for my chemistry mocks so right now I'm relearning the chemistry I've done in the last 2 years :)) /neg
Papyrus - don't fear the reaper by blue öyster cult. This used to be my fav song for a while I still like it just not as much. I like the repetitive drum and bass? I think it's the bass anyway
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armenianwriterman · 11 months
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So instead of an nintendo switch thing from an ancient civilization, this time we have a nintendo prosthetic thing from a different ancient civilization.
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cat-eye-nebula · 1 year
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Giza Pyramid is an Ancient Power Plant.
Full documentary on youtube
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flamboyantsteve · 1 year
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ancient apocalypse is starting to make me think ancient aliens was onto something
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theoldandnewfirm · 2 years
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My brain's back burner energy is now dedicated to restructuring the plots of trollhunters/3 below/wizards and--ugh--ROTT to connect the three around the "Arcane Order are celestial beings that seeded life across the universe as an experiment and now want to end it because they think they failed" idea.
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ancientorigins · 1 year
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There are more than 400 ‘manmade’ mounds on the Isle of Pines, New Caledonia, holding concrete and large iron cones inside them.
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Alexander the Great
Alexander the Great is significant in history since he helped to shape the future of the Silk Road and he was King of Egypt, Persia, and etc: https://depts.washington.edu/silkroad/exhibit/macedonians/essay.html. Alexander the great is from America since Afghanistan, Tameri (old Egypt), and the Silk Road is in the Americas:…
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This article is not focused specifically on the Middle Ages, although the topic of the article is still applicable to a discussion of the medieval era. When people, both historians and those who have not studied as much history, talk about the Middle Ages, a common topic is the low life expectancy of the time period. These statistics are technically correct but can also be misleading. A life expectancy is simply an average. As this interesting article I read demonstrates, it can be greatly affected by people who die young versus those who have reached adulthood. Since far more people make it to adulthood in modern times than in earlier eras of history, the numbers show a greatly different life expectancy. However, this does not mean that there were not plenty of people who lived much longer. While most of the research that the article cites is from antiquity, I think that the same is probably true, at least to an extent, of the Middle Ages.
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humanmorph · 2 years
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I used to be like oh well I like ALL Layton games, the first 3 just are my favourites but. Ok well I'd need to replay to form a proper opinion but I do think story wise I just don't like the last 3 that much. I haaaaate when the stakes get upped to an unnecessary amount and it feels super weird to view them as sequels because of that...
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dndspellgifs · 8 months
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look, I know I've talked about this essay (?) before but like,
If you ever needed a good demonstration of the quote "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic", have I got an exercise for you.
Somebody made a small article explaining the basics of atomic theory but it's written in Anglish. Anglish is basically a made-up version of English where they remove any elements (words, prefixes, etc) that were originally borrowed from romance languages like french and latin, as well as greek and other foreign loanwords, keeping only those of germanic origin.
What happens is an english which is for the most part intelligible, but since a lot everyday english, and especially the scientific vocabulary, has has heavy latin and greek influence, they have to make up new words from the existing germanic-english vocabulary. For me it kind of reads super viking-ey.
Anyway when you read this article on atomic theory, in Anglish called Uncleftish Beholding, you get this text which kind of reads like a fantasy novel. Like in my mind it feels like it recontextualizes advanced scientific concepts to explain it to a viking audience from ancient times.
Even though you're familiar with the scientific ideas, because it bypasses the normal language we use for these concepts, you get a chance to examine these ideas as if you were a visitor from another civilization - and guess what, it does feel like it's about magic. It has a mythical quality to it, like it feels like a book about magic written during viking times. For me this has the same vibe as reading deep magic lore from a Robert Jordan book.
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