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55 pages of results. 531. Thoth Vol I, No. 20: August 3, 1997 [Journals] [Thoth]
... wrote: I often dream about falling. Such dreams are commonplace to the ambitious or those who climb mountains. Lately I dreamed I was clutching at the face of a rock, but it would not hold. Gravel gave way, I grasped for a shrub, but it pulled loose, and in cold terror I fell into the abyss ... lacks all credibility in the eyes of mainstream authorities. Thus the Mayan scholar Peter Joralemon explained the highly unnatural convergence of symbols on the celestial dragon- The primary concern of Olmec art is the representation of creatures that are biologically impossible. Such mythological beings exist in the mind of man, not in the world of nature. It's easy to see ...
532. Monitor [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... Norway, or even Tunguska? Impact or endogenous, there are also 13 craters in Australia apparently formed about 5000 years ago and witnessed by aboriginals who mention fire and devil rock in their myth. Tunguska happened in June, a month that also saw an unusual meteor storm on the Moon in 1975 and an account of what appeared to be ... No. 94, p. 5 One writer has a theory that the Sumerians, conventionally 5000 years ago, developed a world view based upon music which linked mathematics, art, religion, science and poetry. Their gods were assigned numbers that encoded the primary ratios of music and the cosmos was described in musical terms. If the Sumerians ...
533. Megalithic Lunar Observatories -- A Critique [Journals] [Kronos]
... "this alignment of four large menhirs- is undoubtedly lunar".(11) He believes that a line from this alignment indicated a small hill just north of Black Rock Mountain (called Black Mount by Thom). However, this line could not have been used because this small hill would not have been visible from Parc-y-Meirw except under ... acknowledge the help and encouragement received from colleagues at Cardonald College, in particular James Mooney, Thomas Phalan, Allan W. McAneny, and William R. Hutchison of the Art Department in the preparation of drawings. Finally this paper benefited greatly from the constant help and advice freely given by A. J. Hastie. Figure 1. The ...
534. Focus [Journals] [SIS Review]
... Venusian atmosphere are examined via the debate between Velikovsky and A.W . Burgstahler, Professor of Chemistry at the University of Kansas, and the data relating to the lunar rocks provides another debate, this time with Professor York of the University of Toronto. This section concludes with Velikovsky's 1966 challenge to the astronomers, "Is Venus' Heat ... at this Forum that myself and Professor Warner B. Sizemore, both of Glassboro State College, New Jersey, and Professor Lewis M. Greenberg of the Moore College of Art, Philadelphia, agreed that the time was ripe for the establishment in the eastern United States of a centrally located organisation for the purpose of a sound academic evaluation of ...
... north of Europe. Solutréan artifacts have been found in Somerset at Wookey Hole, at Uphill, and at Ebbor Gorge, where a hoard of eleven were discovered in a rock shelter in 1928. 5 In view of the fact that Somerset was inhabited by human beings in the Early Palaeolithic Age as revealed in the Mendip caves and elsewhere in ... , who is supposed to have died about 25,000 years ago.4 Professor Osborn, in Men of the Old Stone Age, claims that the rich and varied art of the Magdalenians vies with that of Egypt and Babylon. On the other hand, their flints, slender and knife-like as they are, from three to four to ...
536. The Cautious Revolutionary [Journals] [SIS Review]
... natura non facit saltum (nature does not make leaps). Gradualism, the idea that all change must be smooth, slow and steady, was never read from the rocks. It represented a common cultural bias, in part a response of nineteenth century liberalism to a world in revolution. But it continues to color our supposedly objective reading ... plays with interesting ideas, examines their implications, and recognizes that old information may be explained in surprising new ways."). He has a wide general knowledge of arts and sciences but carries his learning lightly (" I am tradesman, not a polymath. What I know of planets and politics lies at their intersection with biological evolution ...
537. Letters [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... team in the 1960s, but it is doubtful whether there is any detailed geological knowledge of the varied strata and materials the river cut through over the millennia. What eroded rock formed the sediment deposited in Egypt over the centuries will not be determined for decades, so whether the red earth could have been toxic in the past is unknown. ... equally abrupt disappearance of land in the west around 500AD or slightly later. Phillip Clapham, Hazlemere, Bucks. More Egyptian Monumental Evidence In 1971, the Metropolitan Museum of Art published Re-used blocks from the Pyramid of Ammenemhat I at Lisht by Hans Goedicke. This includes a number of photographs, line drawings and translations of the related texts. ...
538. News from the Internet [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... media reacted enthusiastically to a scene that would be absolutely unforgettable - Mars in color. The image showed an Arizona-like landscape: blue sky, brownish-red desert soil, and gray rocks with green splotches .. . "Gil Levin commented to Patricia Straat [his co-Investigator] and his son Ron, Look at that image! It looks like Arizona ... ; The Nephilim Reappraised; A Tale of Two Cities; Forgotten Spiritual Roots; Karmic Catastrophe; Gnostic Revelations; The Noise of Mankind; The Vedic Asuras. 4 The Arts of Civilisation: Knowledge Transfer; Knowledge Preservation. 5 The Golden Age: The First Occasion; The Days of Dasa-ratha; The Age of Perfect Virtue; The Race ...
539. Thoth Vol V, No 2: Jan 31, 2001 [Journals] [Thoth]
... material raised from the surface into the thin atmosphere. They are powerful "dust devils". In addition to dust it is likely that some electrical spark machining of surface rock takes place. There have been pictures of dust devils leaving tracks across Mars. In some areas where they are prevalent the surface is marked with dark streaks like a ... its attachment to particular viewpoints. It can see itself as an explorer of viewpoints, a creator of viewpoints, an artisan of cognitive composition. This makes of science an art instead of a religion, an invention instead of a ritual. Science is not so much a search for THE TRUTH as it is the generation of truthfulness. This ...
540. Comalcalco: A Case for Early Pre-Columbian Contact and Influence? [Journals] [SIS Review]
... Jonuta), they probably post-date it. The usual explanation given for the sudden appearance of fired brick masonry is that because Comalcalco is over 60 miles from the nearest substantial rock outcrop, the Comalcalco Mayas exploited the clay soil of the area to make bricks. It is assumed that the technique of firing the bricks in kilns was a natural ... between the Old and New Worlds. The evidence for pre-Columbian oceanic contact, especially via the Pacific, is vast, stemming from anthropology, biology, botany, genetics, art, language, calendars, epigraphy and geography. It is complex and diverse, hard to recover and often ambiguous. The most competent investigators tend to be specialists who ...
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