To: SunkenCiv
I think it's stretching to think that this looks like a guy with a dork. It looks more like a variation on the squatting man figures (thousands found worldwide) that are representations of one particular type of plasma instabilities seen in a high current Z-pinch aurora that occurred some 20,000 years ago
PDF available here.
These images were adapted from Peratt's research by another group whose interpretation of the phenomenon Peratt disavows. The image in the upper left is of a plasma phenomenon that would have been visible worldwide and reproduced at various declinations depending on latitude of observation. The other images are of rock art from around the world that are believed to depict the plasma phenomenon. You can see more examples of other plasma instabilities and their representation in similar rock art in the above-linked PDF by Peratt.
19 posted on
02/27/2012 4:48:27 PM PST by
aruanan
To: aruanan; SunkenCiv
I need to check the date in the PDF. I think it may be a lot more recent that 20k bp. Okay, from the second paper (IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PLASMA SCIENCE, VOL. 35, NO.4, August 2007, Characteristics for the Occurrence fo a High-Current Z-Pinch Aurora as Recorded in Antiquity Part II: Directionality and Source, Peratt AL, McGovern J, Qoyawayma AH, Vander Sluijs MA, and Peratt MG) I read Neolithic, Early Bronze Age.
25 posted on
02/27/2012 4:59:48 PM PST by
aruanan
To: aruanan; Fred Nerks; Renfield
30 posted on
02/27/2012 5:31:32 PM PST by
SunkenCiv
(FReep this FReepathon!)
To: aruanan
I have a collected a large number of these representations - of what? They appear all over the world, in the Alps, on Easter Island, on the African continent - and here's one from CARAL in Peru:
36 posted on
02/27/2012 6:54:40 PM PST by
Fred Nerks
(FAIR DINKUM!)
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