Third Giant Megalith, Weighing 1,650 Tons, Confirmed At Baalbek
I believe these huge megaliths long predate the construction of the Temple of Jupiter and are likely to be 12,000 or more years old — contemporaneous with the megalithic site of Gobekli Tepe in Turkey.
The Mysterious Ancient Pyramid In Indonesia That Is Rewriting History
The archaeological establishment is scrambling to find some reason to reject and pour scorn on the extraordinary consequences of the excavations now taking place at Gunung Padang in Indonesia.
Karahan Tepe
I’m in Turkey on another research trip for “Magicians of the Gods”, the sequel to “Fingerprints of the Gods” that I’m working on for publication in 2015.
Casting Precious into the Cracks of Doom, Androgyny, Alchemy, Evolution and the One Ring (Part III)
Apparently there was an age of androgyny during Paleolithic times. Relations between the sexes were egalitarian, and life-affirming values were celebrated, but this was wiped out and replaced by dominator, patriarchal societies that still rule.
Ancient Tomb Unearthed
Archeologists have uncovered the only known untouched royal tomb of the Wari in Peru.
The Forgotten Underworld of Japan
Many anomalous
structures scattered around the world bear the signature of human
design. A sunken city off the southwest coast of
India and the
underwater pyramids of Yonaguni, Japan are known to have been above water during the last ice age. Some figurines from ancient Japan depict what appear to be humanoid creatures with
space suits.
Lasers Uncover the World
Instead of uncovering with the pickaxe of the past, archaeologists can now remotely survey micro topography with the use of laser technology.
Ancestry Tale Retold by DNA
New scientific evidence
dug up by scientists at the University of Leeds, UK, poses a challenge to the commonly accepted theory that inhabitants of the Polynesian islands originated from Taiwan around 3,000 years ago.
Ancient Seafarers Defy History
A new discovery has anthropologists once again reworking their notion of history, this time pushing back the dates of a seafaring population at least 67,000 years.
Enter the Jaguar
The monumental ruins of Chavín de Huantar in the Peruvian Andes, are, officially, a mystery. The vast, ruined granite and sandstone site seems to have been neither a city nor a military structure, but a temple complex constructed for unknown ritual purposes by a culture which had vanished long before written sources appeared.