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Origins
Introduction To The Forbidden Archaeology
 
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This map shows the movement or frequency of peoples of the East the Denisonovans. It is thought the Denisovans eventually integrated into modern man, as there were not many Denisovans coming from the West to the East. The  Solutreans, hypothesis suggests, (possibly became the clovis people) were the first ancient settlers in North America, tools found on archaelogical digs strongly resemble what was identified as Solutrean blades that were found in Europe and this suggests they may have spread across North America, carrying their distinctive blade with them. A Recent Discovery, Although "Politically Incorrect", Proves SOLUTREANS Were The First Americans. Gary Vey for Viewzone  suggested in his piece for CNN: It's a discovery that could rewrite the story of southeastern United States. Stone tools and mastodon bones found at the bottom of a Florida river point to humans living in the region 14,550 years ago. That's more than 1,500 years earlier than previously believed, scientists say.

"This is a big deal," said Jessi Halligan, one of the study's authors and an assistant professor of anthropology at Florida State University.
"It's pretty exciting. We thought we knew the answers to how and when we got here, but now the story is changing." The discovery on the Aucilla River was reported Friday by the journal Science Advances. Here are some of the details:

Butchered bones, knives
The four-year study included sending divers to the Page-Ladson site, a deep hole 30 feet underwater in the Aucilla River, researchers said. There, divers excavated artifacts such as butchered bones of extinct animals, a mastodon tusk and a biface, which is a knife fragment with sharp edges.
 Divers excavated bones and tools from the Page-Ladson, which is 30 feet underwater in the Aucilla River. "At Page-Ladson, hunter-gatherers, possibly accompanied by dogs, butchered or scavenged a mastodon carcass at the sinkhole's edge next to a small pond at around 14,550 years ago," the authors said in Science Advances.

What was once a pond was buried beneath the murky waters for a series of reasons, including centuries of civilization, rising sea levels and layers of sediment. "These people had successfully adapted to their environment; they knew where to find freshwater, game, plants, raw materials for making tools, and other critical resources for survival." The scientists used radiocarbon dating techniques to find out how old the artifacts are.
Aaaah! What about the Clovis?

Until that point, researchers had believed the Clovis people were among the first inhabitants of the Americas about 13,000 years ago, according to the study. Page-Ladson is the first pre-Clovis site documented in the southeastern part of North America, it said. "The new discoveries at Page-Ladson show that people were living in the Gulf Coast area much earlier than believed," said Michael R. Waters, director of Texas A&M's center for the study of the first Americans. Waters was one of the study's lead authors.

In the 1980s, other researchers had retrieved several stone tools and a mastodon tusk from the site, but their discovery did not make much news. Halligan and her colleagues returned to the site in 2012 and expanded on the previous research and archaeological finds. In one of the instances, a mastodon tusk recovered earlier had deep grooves. They concluded the grooves were made by humans during the tusk's extraction.

Now... more discoveries that have been suppressed because of politicizing the "Native Americans came from Asia" theory. Enter -- the European SOLUTREANS!

Scallop fishermen net historic artifacts
Tasty deep-sea scallops like to burrow deep in the ocean floor. Fishermen plow and trawl the sea bottom far off shore, pulling up thousands of scallops at a time in their nets. Sometimes they also find other things.

In 1971 a scallop boat, the Cinmar, was fishing 60 miles east of the Virginia cape, in 240 feet of water when they pulled up part of the jaw from an ancient mastodon -- a large extinct elephant from the last ice age. Along with this catch they also found a curious stone spear point that resembled the famous Clovis points from 13,000 years ago.

The area where these artefacts were found was once dry land. During the last ice age the oceans of the world were much lower. Much of their water was locked up in huge glaciers that covered the Northern latitudes. The bones and spear were likely remnants of pre-historic hunting by some of the earliest inhabitants of North America. But there were even more surprises to come.

Carbon dating of the mastodon bone indicated it was 22,760 years old. Researchers also scrutinized the blade. It had not been smoothed by wave action or tumbling. They concluded the blade had not been pushed out to sea but had been buried where the Cinmar found it.

"My guess is the blade was used to butcher the mastodon... I'm almost positive... Its makers probably paddled from Europe and arrived in America thousands of years ahead of the western migration, making them the first Americans."

Dennis J. Stanford, co-author of Across Atlantic Ice: The Origin of America's Clovis Culture and Smithsonian Institution anthropoligist.
Chemical analysis of the spear point showed that it originated from flint in an area that is now France! Analysis of the way it was made showed that it was not a Clovis point at all, but a hand crafted point made by European humans known as the Solutreans.
Integrated into modern man as not many Denisovans coming from the West to the East.  Solutreans, (possibly became the clovis people) first developed the arts, rock profiles, sculptures and technology possible derived from the relationships with the Denisovans. Swiderians possibly the originators of ther Gobekli Tepe, Sourthern Turkey, 9600-8000BCE ref: pillar 43 records a cataclysm, in the form of a comet.
Representation of death and rebirth transitions – the ball represents the human soul – North Celestial pole, a hole from the physical to the sky world -  Cygnus, Scorpius constellations Entrance into the sky world (pillar 43) – Cosmic geography 40-45000 years ago adopted by the Denisovans.

Cygnus was important as well as  Orion in Egyptology, the times of the pyramids. Note: voids in the pyramids were found, possibly  relieving chambers towards the North of the burial chambers.

See Video: Anunnaki Gods of Ancient Mesoamerica (Ancient Astronaut Archive) Published on Jan 22, 2018.

Zecharia Sitchin makes the best arguments for the South American connection in his book, The Lost Realms. Sitchin attributes the influx of gods and men into the Americas to the Anunnaki, where in the Western Hemisphere the so-called mythological gods are named, for example, Viracocha or Quetzalcoatl, with Viracocha quite possibly equated to the Sumerian Ishkur (Inanna's twin brother, aka “The Storm God”), while Quetzalcoatl might well be the Sumerian Ningishzidda and/or the Egyptian Thoth." ~ Dan Sewell Ward
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