Posted on 09/13/2015 12:59:29 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
The Bourke armor helmet (Courtesy Bleed et al., used with permission)
The gorget of the Bourke armor consists of cotton twill backing covered in iron scales. The wooden crosspiece was added by Capt. Bourke so he could mount it on the wall as a conversation piece. (Photo courtesy Bleed et al., used with permission)
A rear view of the gorget shows the cotton twill backing. (Photo courtesy Bleed et al., used with permission)
Might fit on a child’s head.
/johnny
Whoa! Nice find!
Perhaps Pizarro lost one of his men to a walkabout...
Plains Indians were known to have acquired armor, so it could have been taken from a Spanish soldier or traded for, and ended up far from any Spanish outpost. There was, I believe, a Kiowa chief named Iron Jacket because he wore either some kind of Spanish half-armor or chain mail.
Interesting that the helmet is open at the top. To let the heat escape, I presume.
Either that or the helmet belonged to a unicorn.
Kardashians?
Seems odd to make a helmet and leave a round hole on the top. I wonder if there was a decorative metal cap or peak that’s now missing.
Ancient aliens! Knights Templar! Vikings! Make up your own story. That stuff looks to be in pretty good shape for having lain in the dirt for centuries.
John Bourke who wrote,,
On the Border with Crook
Cool.
They’re wrong. They’re much older than a few hundred years. These artifacts are from the battles Joseph Smith talked about. He just missed the location by a few thousand miles. /s
Since West/Southwest Texas and New Mexico was already home to Spanish ranchers from Mexico in the mid-late 1700s-my ancestors were some of them-it would seem logical that explorers and others were wandering around there many, many years earlier exploring, trading with the native tribes for both needed items and stuff they could trade or sell to someone else-and mapping-those settlers coming from Mexico certainly had to have maps to find where in that huge place their land was located and how to get there.
I’ll bet there is a ton of stuff like this hidden away in private collections all over the US-I hope more gets found- too bad those bits of armor can’t talk-that would be enough stories for a lot of nights by the fire...
Quite a few Spanish explorers
wandering about seaching for Cities of Gold.
He’s from France not Spain.
Send it over to the Jeffersonian. Dr. Hodgins will probably be able to tell you exactly where the iron ore came from that was used to make it.
A Kardashian gorget would be made from Spandex - I’m sure. Not cotton twill.
That happens a lot to OOPARTS (OutOfPlaceParts) when they don't conform to the prevailing theories. Too many professors/scientists have made a career out of supporting the status quo and when something disproving it pops up, it is either called "a religious object" and dismissed or "an anomaly" and hidden away in the museum basement.
I was a virtual pen pal with a gal up in Canada, who had a college friend aspiring to be an archaeologist. She who went on a dig, found an Oopart and excitedly brought it to the project leader. He told her that if she ever wanted a career in that discipline, to just shut up about her find. I never found out what the "thing" was.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.