close
more_vert

I'm very glad you said that Dee. I would not want to dismiss 28 years of someone's life as BOLLOCKS. Driven, obsessed he may have been but at least its visionary and, without checking it out (anyone going to Calgary in the near future?) how will we ever know for sure.

The questions I want to ask in archaeological terms are 1: do we know, for how many thousands of years was North America inhabited by its indigenous people and 2: how did they get there. If links can be traced back to other advanced civilisations then anything is possible.

D dee

Thanks tjj, I dont know if Big Bruce, the originator of this thread is Canadian, maybe he could shed some light on your questions. I havent got a clue!! Fascinating stuff though. Ive got a book,( which I havent got round to reading yet) about North American monuments, some look fabulous too, not too disimilar to our long barrows, chambered cairns etc. There are quite a few 'balancing' Logan stones around too. Certainly opened up my eyes (and mind!!) to an ancient culture i had no idea existed!

tjj wrote:
I'm very glad you said that Dee. I would not want to dismiss 28 years of someone's life as BOLLOCKS. Driven, obsessed he may have been but at least its visionary and, without checking it out (anyone going to Calgary in the near future?) how will we ever know for sure.

The questions I want to ask in archaeological terms are 1: do we know, for how many thousands of years was North America inhabited by its indigenous people and 2: how did they get there. If links can be traced back to other advanced civilisations then anything is possible.

It was "MORE THAN LIKELY BOLLOCKS " and was as much a response to the DISCUSS as anything , the probability was also important .But it is also applicable to the site . There are two problems for me wilith this site . Three , of approx 150 ,major medicine wheel sites that have been suggested as having meaningful astro alignments but they are not generally accepted as such by most archaeoastronomers , plus when a new one appears that looks like it's provenance as a monument is dubious ,according to a pro archaeo , I don't feel too confident about this actually being a candidate and think it is more than likely not what the discoverer believes . Mainstream archaeology is wrong a lot of the time and it needs constant reminding of it's failings but when compared with fringe stuff , most of which gets forgotten over the years , it rarely fails .

tjj wrote:
I'm very glad you said that Dee. I would not want to dismiss 28 years of someone's life as BOLLOCKS. Driven, obsessed he may have been but at least its visionary and, without checking it out (anyone going to Calgary in the near future?) how will we ever know for sure.


See below

The questions I want to ask in archaeological terms are 1: do we know, for how many thousands of years was North America inhabited by its indigenous people and 2: how did they get there. If links can be traced back to other advanced civilisations then anything is possible.

The site is in Canada and it is believed the original inhabitants came from Asia via boat or Inuit across the Bering land bridge approx 15,000 BC .