| By
Joseph Robert Jochmans, Lit. D.
Walk
into any modern museum, or open any history textbook,
and the picture of the past presented is one in which
humanity started from primitive beginnings, and steadily
progressed upward in the development of culture and science.
Most of the artifacts preserved in archaeological and
geological records have been neatly arranged to fit this
accepted linear view of our past.
Yet
many other tantalizing bits and pieces unearthed offer
a very different story of what really happened. Called
out-of-place artifacts, they don't fit the established
pattern of prehistory, pointing back instead to the existence
of advanced civilizations before any of the known ancient
cultures came into being.
Though
such discoveries with their inherent sophistication are
well-documented, most historians would like to sweep these
disturbing anomalies under the proverbial rug. But the
rug of true history is getting very lumpy, and hard to
step across without tripping over such obvious contradictions
to the conservative picture of antiquity.
What's
more, the mysterious artifacts confirm ancient legends
and stories which describe human history not as linear,
but cyclic. Forgotten ages and former worlds rose and
fell in great cycles of life and death over millions of
years, lost to our memory except in myths, and now, through
a few amazing pieces left to us. Here are the top ten
out-of-place artifacts and what they reveal to us about
our missing legacy:
1.
BAFFLING BATTERIES OF BABYLON In 1938, Dr. Wilhelm
Kong, an Austrian archaeologist rummaging through the
basement of the museum made a find that was to drastically
alter all concepts of ancient science. A 6-inch-high pot
of bright yellow clay dating back two millennia contained
a cylinder of sheet-copper 5 inches by 1.5 inches. The
edge of the copper cylinder was soldered with a 60-40
lead-tin alloy comparable to today's best solder. The
bottom of the cylinder was capped with a crimped-in copper
disk and sealed with bitumen or asphalt. Another insulating
layer of asphalt sealed the top and also held in place
an iron rod suspended into the center of the copper cylinder.
The rod showed evidence of having been corroded with acid.
With a background in mechanics, Dr. Konig recognized this
configuration was not a chance arrangement, but that the
clay pot was nothing less than an ancient electric battery.
The
ancient battery in the Baghdad Museum as well as those
others which were unearthed in Iraq all date from the
Parthian Persian occupation between 248 B.C. and A.D.
226. However, Konig found copper vases plated with silver
in the Baghdad Museum excavated from Sumerian remains
in southern Iraq dating back to at least 2500 B.C. When
the vases were lightly tapped a blue patina or film separated
from the surfaces, characteristic of silver electroplated
to copper. It would appear then that the Persians inherited
their batteries from the earliest known civilization in
the Middle East.
2.
THE STRANGE ELECTRON TUBES FROM DENDERA In different
locations within the Late Ptolemaic Temple of Hathor at
Dendera in Egypt are curious wall engravings which Egyptologists
cannot explain in traditional religio-mythic terms, but
about which electrical engineers are finding very modern
interpretations.
In
one chamber, No. 17, the topmost panel, depicts Egyptian
priests operating what look like oblong tubes, performing
various specific tasks. Each tube has a serpent extending
its full length inside. Swedish engineer Henry Kjellson,
in his book Forvunen Teknik (Disappeared Technology),
noted that in the hieroglyphs these serpents are translated
as seref, which means to glow, and believes it refers
to some form of electrical current. In the scene, to the
extreme right appears a box on top where sits an image
of the Egyptian god Atum-Ra, which identifies the box
as the energy source. Attached to the box is a braided
cable which electromagnetics engineer Alfred D. Bielek
identified as virtually an exact copy of engineering illustrations
used today for representing a bundle of conducting electrical
wires. The cable runs from the box the full length of
the floor of the picture, and terminates at both the ends
and at the bases of the tube objects. These objects each
rest on a pillar called a djed, which Bielek identified
as a high-voltage insulator.
The
tube objects look very much like TV picture tubes, an
impression which is not far from wrong, for electronics
technician N. Zecharius has identified the objects as
Crookes or electron tubes, the forerunner of the modern
television tube.
Though
the upper chamber scenes have been damaged by vandals
from a later age, other pictures found inside the crypt
below the Holy of Holies are almost perfectly preserved,
and their portrayal deepens the mystery of the strange
electron tubes even further. Here, not only are the tubes
shown in full operation, but something else has been added
which may suggest the ultimate purpose for the tubes themselves.
In several instances, both men and women are shown sitting
underneath the tubes, hands held out and cupped, which
meant they were in a receptive mode. What kind of radiation
treatment was being performed here?
3.
THE ENIGMA OF THE ASHOKA PILLAR A testimony to
ancient metallurgical skills in Delhi, India is called
the Ashoka Pillar. Standing over 23 feet, it averages
16 inches in diameter and weighs about 6 tons. The solid
wrought-iron shaft is made up of expertly welded discs.
An inscription on the base is an epitaph to King Chandra
Gupta II, who died in A.D. 413.
Despite
being well over a millennium and a half in age, the Pillar's
constitution is remarkably preserved. The smooth surface
is like polished brass with only occasional instances
of pock-marks and weathering. The mystery is that any
equivalent mass of iron, subjected to the Indian monsoon
rains, winds and temperatures for 1,600 years or more
would have been reduced to rust long ago.
Production
of the iron and the techniques of preservation are far
beyond 5th century abilities. It is probably far older,
maybe several thousand years. Who were the mysterious
metallurgists who made this wonder, and what happened
to their civilization?
4.
AN OUT-OF-PLACE COMPUTER FROM ANTIKYTHERA A few
days before Easter Sunday in 1900, Greek sponge divers
off the small island of Antikythera discovered the remains
of an ancient ship filled with bronze and marble statues
and assorted artifacts later dated between 85 and 50 B.C.
Among
the finds was a small formless lump of corroded bronze
and rotted wood. which was sent along with the other artifacts
to the National Museum in Athens for further study. Soon,
as the wood fragments dried and shrank from exposure to
air, the lump split open revealing inside the outlines
of a series of gear wheels like a modern clock.
In
1958 Dr. Derek J. de Solla Price successfully reconstructed
the machine's appearance and use. The gearing system calculated
the annual movements of the sun and moon. The arrangement
shows that the gears could be moved forward and backward
with ease at any speed. The device was thus not a clock
but more like a calculator that could show the positions
of the heavens past, present and future.
It
is highly possible that the device may have origins ages
long before the Greeks, and in a land far removed, now
unknown.
5.
FLIGHT IN ANCIENT EGYPT In 1898 a curious winged
object was discovered in the tomb of Pa-di-Imen in north
Saqqara, Egypt dated to about 200 B.C. Because the birth
of modern aviation was still several years away, when
the strange artifact was sent to the Cairo Museum, it
was catalogued and then shelved among other miscellaneous
items to gather dust.
Seventy
years later, Dr. Kahlil Messiha, an Egyptologist and archaeologist,
was examining a Museum display labeled bird figurines.
While most of the display were indeed bird sculptures,
the Saqqara artifact was certainly not. It possessed characteristics
never found on birds, yet which are part of modern aircraft
design. Dr. Messiha, a former model plane enthusiast,
immediately recognized the aircraft features and persuaded
the Egyptian Ministry of Culture to investigate.
Made
of very light sycamore the craft weighs 0.5 oz. with straight
and aerodynamically shaped wings, spanning about 7 inches.
A separate slotted piece fits onto the tail precisely
like the back tail wing on a modern plane.
A
full-scale version could have flown carrying heavy loads,
but at low speeds, between 45 and 65 miles per hour. What
is not known, however, is what the power source was. The
model makes a perfect glider as it is. Even though over
2,000 years old, it will soar a considerable distance
with only a slight jerk of the hand. Fully restored balsa
replicas travel even farther.
Messiha
notes that the ancient Egyptians often built scale models
of everything familiar in their daily lives and placed
them in their tombs, temples, ships, chariots, servants,
animals and so forth. Now that we have found a model plane,
Messiha wonders if perhaps somewhere under the desert
sands there may yet be unearthed the remains of life-sized
gliders.
6.
A JET FROM SOUTH AMERICA In 1954 the government
of Colombia sent part of its collection of ancient gold
artifacts on a U. S. tour. Emmanuel Staubs, one of America's
leading jewelers, was commissioned to cast reproductions
of six of the objects. Fifteen years later one was given
to biologist-zoologist Ivan T. Sanderson for analysis.
After a thorough examination and consulting a number of
experts, Sanderson's mind-boggling conclusion was that
the object is a model of a high-speed aircraft at least
a thousand years old.
Approximately
2 inches long the object was worn as a pendant on a neck
chain. It was classified as Sinu, a pre-Inca culture from
A.D. 500 to 800. Both Sanderson and Dr. Arthur Poyslee
of the Aeronautical Institute of New York concluded it
did not represent any known winged animal. In fact, the
little artifact appears more mechanical than biological.
For example, the front wings are delta-shaped and rigidly
straight edged, very un-animal-like.
The
rudder is perhaps the most un-animal but airplane-like
item. It is right-triangle, flat-surfaced, and rigidly
perpendicular to the wings. Only fish have upright tail
fins, but none have exclusively an upright flange without
a counter-balancing lower one. Adding to the mystery,
an insignia appears on the left face of the rudder, precisely
where ID marks appear on many airplanes today. The insignia
is perhaps as out-of place as the gold model itself, for
it has been identified as the Aramaic or early Hebrew
letter beth or B. This may indicate that the original
plane did not come from Colombia, but was the product
of a very early people inhabiting the Middle East who
knew the secret of flying.
7.
CRYSTAL SKULL FROM ATLANTIS Without doubt the most
famous and enigmatic ancient crystal is the skull, discovered
in 1927 by F.A. Mitchell-Hedges atop a ruined temple at
the ancient Mayan city of Lubaantum, in British Honduras,
now Belize.
The
skull was made from a single block of clear quartz, 5
inches high, 7 inches long and 5 inches wide. It is about
the size of a small human cranium, with near perfect detail.
In 1970, art restorer Frank Dorland was given permission
to submit the skull to tests at the Hewlitt-Packard Laboratories.
Revealed were many anomalies.
The
skull had been carved with total disregard to the natural
crystal axis, a process unheard-of in modern crystallography.
No metal tools were used. Dorland was unable to find any
tell-tale scratch marks. Indeed, most metals would have
been ineffectual. A modern penknife cannot mark it. From
tiny patterns near the carved surfaces, Dorland determined
it was first chiseled into rough form, probably using
diamonds. The finer shaping, grinding and polishing, Dorland
believes, was done with innumerable applications of water
and silicon-crystal sand. If true, it would have taken
300 years of continuous labor. We must accept this almost
unimaginable feat, or admit to the use of some form of
lost technology.
Modern
science is stumped to explain the skill and knowledge
incorporated. As Garvin summarized: It is virtually impossible
today, in the time when men have climbed mountains on
the moon, to duplicate this achievement...It would not
be a question of skill, patience and time. It would simply
be impossible. As one crystallographer from Hewlitt-Packard
said, The damned thing shouldn't be.
8.
WHO SHOT NEANDERTHAL MAN? The Museum of Natural
History in London displays an early Paleolithic skull,
dated at 38,000 years old, and excavated in 1921 in modern
Zambia. On the left side of the skull is a perfectly round
hole nearly a third of an inch in diameter. Curiously,
there are no radial split-lines around the hole or other
marks that should have been left by a cold weapon, such
as an arrow or spear. Opposite the hole, the cranium is
shattered, and reconstruction of the fragments show the
skull was blown from the inside out, as from a rifle shot.
In fact, any slower a projectile would have produced neither
the neat hole nor the shattering effect. Forensic experts
who have examined the skull agree the cranial damage could
not have been caused by anything but a high-speed projectile,
purposely fired at the prehistoric victim, with intent
to kill.
If
such a weapon was indeed fired at the man, then one of
two conclusions can be made: Either the specimen is not
as old as it is claimed to be, and was shot by a European
in recent centuries, or the remains are as old as claimed,
and the marksman was ancient too. In view of the fact
that the Paleolithic skull was excavated from a depth
of 60 feet, mostly of lead rock, the second conclusion
is more plausible. But who possessed gunpowder 38,000
years ago? Certainly not Stone Age man himself. Another
race must have existed, one far more advanced and civilized,
yet contemporary. The question is, where did that rifle-toting
marksman call home?
9.
THE INCREDIBLE STONE OF DR. CABRERA A very unique
time-capsule of images is housed in a warehouse in Ica,
Peru. Here are some 20,000 stone boulders, tablets, and
baseball-sized rocks, decorated with an astounding assortment
of pictures, in many cases very much out of time and place.
The owner is local physician, amateur archeologist and
geologist Dr. Javier Cabrera Darquea.
Most
material employed is a gray andesite, an extremely hard
granitic semi-crystalline matrix, that is very difficult
to carve. But as Dr. Cabrera observed, People have been
finding these engraved stones in the region for years.
They were first seen and recorded by Jesuit missionary
Father Simon, who accompanied Pizarro in 1525. Samples
were shipped to Spain in 1562.
The
stone portraits show very sophisticated surgery skills
and medical knowledge, in some cases as advanced, and
even more advanced, than today. There are scenes of Caesarean
sections, blood transfusions, the use of acupuncture needles
as an anesthetic (which only gained use in the West since
the late 1970s), delicate operations on the lungs and
kidneys, and removal of cancerous tumors. There are likewise
detailed images of open heart and open brain surgery,
as well as 20 stones showing a step-by-step heart transplant
procedure.
This
is a disturbing revelation in itself, that someone in
unknown antiquity achieved a level of sophistication rivaling
our own. But there are other pictures even more out-of-place.
As Dr. Cabrera noted, and as has been verified by other
medical physicians, there are stone etchings which show
a brain transplant. The prehistoric surgeons, it is evident,
possessed knowledge several steps beyond modern-day surgery.
10.
MANUFACTURED METALS MILLIONS OF YEARS OLD For the
past three decades miners at the Wonderstone Silver Mine
near Ottosdal in the Western Transvaal, South Africa,
have been extracting out of deep rock several strange
metallic spheroids. So far at least 200 have been found.
In 1979, several were closely examined by J.R. McIver,
professor of geology at the University of Witwaterstand
in Johannesburg, and geologist professor Andries Bisschoff
of Potsshefstroom University.
The
metallic spheroids look like flattened globes, averaging
1 to 4 inches in diameter, and their exteriors usually
are colored steel blue with a reddish reflection, and
embedded in the metal are tiny flecks of white fibers.
They are made of a nickel-steel alloy which does not occur
naturally, and is of a composition that rules them out,
being of meteoric origin. Some have only a thin shell
about a quarter of an inch thick, and when broken open
are found filled with a strange spongy material that disintegrated
into dust on contact with the air.
What
makes all this very remarkable is that the spheroids were
mined out of a layer of pyrophyllite rock, dated both
geologically and by the various radio-isotope dating techniques
as being at least 2.8 to 3 billion years old.
Adding
mystery to mystery, Roelf Marx, curator of the South African
Klerksdorp Museum, has discovered that the spheroid he
has on exhibit slowly rotates on its axis by its own power,
while locked in its display case and free of outside vibrations.
There may thus be an energy extant within these spheroids
still operating after three eons of time.
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