Posted on 09/30/2002 3:47:50 PM PDT by blam
Cave skeleton is European, 1,300 years old, man says
Archaeologist group wants a look at evidence
Sunday September 29, 2002
By Rick Steelhammer
STAFF WRITER
MORGANTOWN The man who first advanced the theory that markings carved on in a Wyoming County cave are actually characters from an ancient Irish alphabet has found human remains at the site, which tests indicate are European in origin and date back to A.D. 710, he maintains.
Robert Pyle of Morgantown says that a DNA analysis of material from the skeletons teeth roots was conducted by Brigham Young University. That analysis, he says, shows that the skeletons DNA, when compared to samples from Native American groups and an array of European sources, most closely matches samples from the British Isles.
Pyle says the DNA test, plus a radiocarbon test that dates the skeleton to 710, suggest the presence of a European visitor to the North American continent nearly 800 years before the arrival of Columbus, and nearly 300 years before Viking Leif Erickson.
Found near the skeleton was a bone needle etched with markings similar to those on the cave walls.
Pyle says his findings and the test results help validate his hypothesis that the markings at the Wyoming County site were done by seafaring people, probably monks, probably from the British Isles.
Based on the available data, thats doubtful, counters Robert Maslowski, president of the Council for West Virginia Archaeology, a state association of professional archaeologists with research interests in West Virginia.
Pyles findings, Maslowski says, while interesting, still need to be examined by the professional community. We would welcome the opportunity to go over the evidence to look at the skeletal material, the archaeological material, the radiocarbon data and the DNA data, then draw our own conclusions, he says.
Pyle, who performed archaeological surveys for the state Division of Highways in late 1970s and early 1980s, does not have a degree in archaeology. He says he is a federally certified archaeologist who has studied the subject at Northwestern University, and has taken geology courses at WVU.
He says he would be interested in having another group examine his work, including additional DNA and Carbon-14 testing, which he paid for using privately raised funds totaling about $7,000.
He also wants to raise money to preserve the site and continue his research.
Pyle first visited the cave, known as the Cook petroglyph site, in 1981, while in the area to conduct archeological surveys for the DOH.
I was visiting my sister when someone mentioned some Indian scratchings on the top of a nearby ridge, he said.
When he arrived at the site, I saw an elongated group of markings along the right side, he recalls. Id just read a book on Norse runes, and my first thought was that these were archaic runes.
He later read about carvings found in Ireland and Wales, usually on the edges of grave markers, that made use of an ancient Celtic alphabet of connected lines and slashes known as Ogam.
Joined by Dr. William Grant of Edinburgh University in Scotland and Dr. John Grant of Oakland, Md., both Celtic linguists who had studied at Catholic University in Washington, D.C., Pyle continued to study the Wyoming County carvings, plus similar markings near Dingess in Mingo County and in Manchester, Ky., eventually hypothesizing that they were Ogam.
In the 1980s, Wonderful West Virginia magazine ran a series of stories about the Wyoming County site and the carvings, and their links to Ogam.
In 1989, West Virginia Archaeologist Magazine published an issue devoted to debunking that theory. Editor Janet Brashler, then an archaeologist for the Monongahela National Forest, concluded that the turkey foot patterns carved in the rock are design elements in common with other acknowledged prehistoric Native American petroglyphs.
Pyle maintains the carvings contain crosses, rebuses and other markings unique to Ogam.
He traveled to Ireland to study the markings in 1998, and in 2000, was invited to take part in the examination of a newly found 8-feet-high, 20-feet-long Irish Ogam petroglyph panel, which closely resembles the Wyoming County markings. The latter visit to Ireland was filmed for a public television special.
Pyle says his findings and the recent test results will make it possible to validate a hypothesis I didnt think it would be possible to validate in a lifetime.
He says he expected his findings to generate controversy.
Thats science, he says. No one totally, 100 percent endorses a new idea. ... Ill let science decide where to go from here. But I would like to have credit for this discovery.
We know the Vikings were here before him, but I wouldnt stop celebrating Columbus Day, yet, Maslowski says. Hopefully, well be able to go over the findings and have this resolved by the end of October West Virginia Archaeology Month.
Pyle plans to post his findings on the Internet at www.prehistoricplanet.com/wv/. The site already contains material on Ogam and the West Virginia petroglyphs.
To contact staff writer Rick Steelhammer, use e-mail or call 348-5169.
Tourist Guy?
No Justice no peace. No justice no peace.
PS: We will settle for a casino and a keg of Guinness.
This doesn't pass the smell test so far as I am concerned.
Wyoming County, WV, is on the western side of the Appalachian Mt chain. The chance that unknown Europeans got there without some reasonable infrastructure is preposterous. The Europeans we know of landed at Jamestown, not too far away, in 1607. In my quick search, I didn't find any evidence of Europeans we know of getting to Western Virginia until more than a century later.
ML/NJ
Not only that.........
Imagine if, upon further research, it can be shown that Europeans were exploring the East Coast of North America around the same time that the Indians (who were originally Asians) were exploring the West Coast.
What would that do to the notion of "Native Americans"?
Perhaps both Europeans & Asians were ancient immigrant groups to the New World at about the same time.
Now there's a thought.
My hubby just yelled from the bedroom; "the voyages of Brendan!"
There were no 'Native Americans' (as we know them today) in North America prior to 6,000 years ago. There were a number of other folks like Kennewick Man, Spirit Cave Man and Buhl Woman here 9,000+ years ago that were Ainu/Joman in origin. The Northern Chinese Asians ('Native Americans'?) came here less than 6,000 years ago. I had a 'Native American' FReeper tell me once that who-ever was here, then that's us. I can 'buy' that.
"The Maoris have been conditioned by liberal whities to deem everything they want, or want control of, as "sacred" to them. There were a people who settled New Zealand before them called the Morioris. The Maoris killed and ate them. ... Revisionist history omits this fact.
LOL. I read that too.
Be specific. What part do you think is in error? (My post #50 sounds suprisingly similar to your post #53)
True.
It's a good thing Clinton isn't president, that cave may have been dynamited by now.
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