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In Horus, a journal published by the late David Griffard, vol II no 1 (1985), Barry Fell was interviewed. Alas, DG went down in a private plane after the seventh issue. Among other things:
"In the middle of Australia there is a group of three or four meteorite craters called the Henley craters. They're like the Arizona meteorite crater -- not so big, but there are several of them -- and, like in Arizona, the land was scattered with pieces of iron meteorite. I think the [inaudible] dating very slow growing desert plants. They believe that the date is about 5000 years ago -- the formation of the craters. The Aboriginal name for this area is the 'Place Where The Sun Walked on the Earth' -- they must have seen it!"

1 posted on 12/08/2010 7:23:57 AM PST by SunkenCiv
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To: SunkenCiv

Years ago I read an article in a major scientific magazine that the natives of Tasmania... could not make fire but relied on natural fires, had no houses but relied on windbreaks, no clothes in their winter but relied again on the natural fires.

Definitly primitive.


9 posted on 12/08/2010 9:47:06 AM PST by Ruy Dias de Bivar (I visited GEN TOMMY FRANKS Military Museum in HOBART, OKLAHOMA! Well worth it!)
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