Posted on 12/26/2011 6:35:46 PM PST by SunkenCiv
If so, any of that found in a Viking site might tie back to the area, and substantiate bunkerhill7's idea of contact.
I was about to post the same thing. That same image was posted here about some site found in Minnesota(?) or Canada a few years ago.
On the other hand, it looks like a southwestern avanyu, the water serpent; or a southeastern uktena, a water serpent or dragon that is the yang to thunder bird’s yin; or it could be akin to the “underwater panther” of eastern indians, the part bird/deer/wildcat/snake/human piasas of the midwest which Indians apparently used to warn dugout river traffic of nearby whirlpools on the Mississippi, or the amphibaemas the Spiro mounds people of Oklahoma carved on their conch shell cups which were sometimes depicted as two snakelike creatures intertwined in a kind of figure 8 knot ; they usually had big elaborate tongues. There’s about as much resemblance to a viking ship as there is to a Chinese dragon boat. Seems that the dragon motif is an independent and widespread thing that in people living wherever there is turbulent water.
The figure in the photo on the right has Obama’s ears...
bttt
If the pic of the guy is anything to go by, I bet they came from Klendathu.
Lovely statue. Knives in both hands. What is it about Meso-American tribes? All bloody sacrifice and genocide.
I love the smell of lamanite in the morning!
You are absolutely CORRECT!!
However; the figure on the LEFT has what looks like a golden rooster on the right side of it.
Replete with pointy teeth!
You are absolutely CORRECT!!
However; the figure on the LEFT has what looks like a golden rooster on the right side of it.
Replete with pointy teeth!
Well; MORMONism claims that some sins are NOT covered by Christ's blood and only the blood of the SINNER can atone for them.
I'm sure we'll find out when their calendar runs out...
No, but thanks for stalking me. What’s next, a show trial?
The Vikings were in North America, of that there is no reasonable doubt — although there was some touch-hole around here who argued against the Viking site at L’Anse aux Meadows by just digging in his or her little feet and gainsaying it, like Monty Python’s Argument Clinic. Despite the supposed evidence to the contrary, the Newport Round Tower is probably also PreColumbian. The climate turned on the Vikings, which cut into their population explosion, and they were left behind in the navigation and ship construction developments that swept Europe for various reasons. Even though there was at one time a Roman Catholic Bishop of Vinland, the Viking colonization ultimately failed, leaving us with, perhaps, Maine Coon Cats and some rune-inscribed stones.
They’d have had to trade for it; the only thing the Vikings *may* have brought back that shows up in durable records is the turkey, and that was available in N America.
I also wonder at the possibilities that the remains of other great civilizations lie well under water on the Continental Shelves, and bulldozed beneath the moraines and buried in outwash plains of the last ice age.
The puzzle is coming together, but there are a lot of pieces yet to be found.
Letter from Newfoundland: Homing in on the Red Paint People
by Angela M.H. Schuster
Volume 53 Number 3, May/June 2000
http://www.archaeology.org/0005/abstracts/letter.html
Red Paint People: A Lost American Culture
by Bruce Bourque
Because of their greater antiquity than the Mound Builders, and the prejudice in his time against any human presence in the Americas prior to 3000 years ago, this archaeologist was ruined and ridiculed in the usual unscholarly way characteristic of the academic world.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1593730381/sunkencivilizati
Camden tool could be 5,000 years old
By Lynda Clancy
Oct 12, 2005
http://knox.villagesoup.com/community/story.cfm?storyID=62109
Red ochre burials: Greater Nicoya and elsewhere
By Frederick W. Lange*
Guanacast Journal, Costa Rica
http://journalcr.com/news_article.php?edition=110&article=2339
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/2103322/posts
Archaeologists discover ancient ivory maskette on Canadian Arctic island
Submitted by owenjarus on Thu, 07/08/2010
Recent research, conducted by Dr. Patricia Sutherland, suggests that the Dorset even developed a trading relationship with the Norse who appeared in the Arctic around AD 1000.
http://heritage-key.com/blogs/owenjarus/archaeologists-discover-ancient-ivory-maskette-canadian-arctic-island
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