Posted on 11/26/2002 7:57:18 AM PST by blam
Archaeologists announce discovery of underwater man-made wall
2002/11/26
The China Post staff
Underwater archaeologists yesterday announced the discovery of a man-made wall submerged under the waters of the Pescadores Islands that could be at least six and seven thousand years old.
Steve Shieh, the head of the planning committee for the Taiwan Underwater Archaeology Institute, said the wall was discovered to the northwest of Tong-chi Island in the Pescadores towards the end of September.
The stone wall, with an average height of one meter and a width of 50 centimeters, covers a distance of over 100 meters, Hsieh said.
The wall ran along the ocean floor at depths of between 25 and 30 meters, he added.
Shieh said that divers found several places along the wall where holes were apparently filled up with pebbles, possibly in an attempt to block winds.(Maybe to keep out the rising water?)
The wall was located by a team of divers working in cooperation with the National Museum of History and the Department of Environmental Sciences at the National Sun Yat-sen University.
In August, researchers scanning waters in the area with sonar discovered what appeared to be the remnants of four to five man-made walls running along the bottom of the sea.
Please see WALL on page(I could not find a map, if you can, please post it.)
Despite difficult diving conditions, Shieh said that a team of more than ten specialists was able to ascertain the positions of at least three of the wall sections.
The proximity of the wall to a similar structure found in 1976 suggests that it may be further evidence of a pre-historical civilization.
A three meter high underwater wall was discovered by amateur divers in waters off the nearby Hu-ching (Tiger Well) Island.
British archaeologists examined the find and proclaimed that the wall was probably made between 7,000 and 12,000 years ago.
The current find stands a mere 100 meters from the site of that discovery.
Six years ago, evidence of a sunken city in the area was found when amateur divers found the remains of what appear to be city walls taking the shape of a cross on the ocean floor.
Further examination suggested the ruins were made between seven and ten thousand years ago as well, although Japanese researchers put the walls construction at between 10,000 and 80,000 years ago.
Taken together, the discoveries have helped to overturn the established notion that Taiwan's earliest aboriginal inhabitants made their way here from mainland China some 6,000 years ago.(There goes the giant hynea theory, huh?)
The underwater finds are part of a growing body of evidence suggesting the existence of civilizations older than anything previously imagined.(suprise, suprise, suprise--Gomer Pyle voice)
On this theory, entire cities ended up underwater after sea levels rose towards the end of the last Ice Age, a date cited by Plato as being some 9,600 years ago.
One of the most dramatic examples of evidence of civilizations found on ocean beds has been megalithic structures off the coast of Yonaguni-jima in Japan that have been interpreted in some circles as being built for sacrificial rites. According to Shieh, a similar structure has been located off of the shores of Taiwan's Pingtung County .
Shieh said that he and his association have plans to explore that location as well as what appears to be a man-made path on the ocean floor off of Taitung County sometime next year.
So you deny that there were waves of people moving across Europe just after the captivities? In order for the Israelites to get to Northwestern Europe they had to go acroos Eastern Europe. The Israelites mostly went west, the Assyrians stayed in Germany. Brandenburg is probably an Israelite name, by the way, of the tribe of Dan. They liked to put their name in the locations and rivers etc. Grab an atlas of Europe and you'll see DN from the Caucusus to Denmark. Snaking right through Europe like an adder along the way. Dan's name was DN in Hebrew.
Gen 49:17 Dan shall be a serpent by the way, an adder in the path, that biteth the horse heels, so that his rider shall fall backward.
All of the so-called "Germanic Tribes" were just different tribes of Celts, and they were all related to each other.
London too?
My Indian friends don't speak Indian.I don't believe he made the genetic equation (though I could be wrong, so I'll flag him here), he was saying that since Hebrew is a Semitic language, and that English (like Latin or German) is an Indo-European one, that poses problems for a Celtic theory of the Lost Tribes.
He's right, it does, though as I've tried to make clear, the problems aren't necessarily insurmountable, they simply need addressing.
As are Hebrew words in modern language. If you're really interest grab a Strong's concordance and start comparing.Do they read "pundits?" Wear "pajamas?"
And there are a lot of Hebrew words that are with us also.What I'm really interested in is seeing people making claims doing the work to support their claims. When I make claims, I will do likewise.
This argument is dumb and a diversion started by an atheist.Great. I'm all ears.
Understand, I believe in the contemporary existence of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel. I'd be tickled to see someone conclusively sew this up, and I don't care if the answer is the Celts, the Afghans, the Kashmiris, pre-Columbian Americans, or Oompa Loomas on the dark side of the Moon.
Look, look, look and you'll will find. I'm not doing your work for you.#1, that is a double ad hominem, and #2, while VadeRetro is an agnostic with whom I've butted heads on theological and scientific questions in the past, I am a Christian and his linguistic question here is absolutely legitimate.
It is not my work, it is properly the work of those who are championing the the Celtic Lost Tribe theory.
If I was to make a claim that the Lost Tribes settled Easter Island, then it's up to me to support that claim. You get to sit back and ask the questions in such an instance.
This is how it is, this wheel needs no reinvention.
Whom have I insulted and when? Kindly produce a quote and a post #.
That's the story of this thread for me.
If they aren't being absorbed, if they're not subjugated, if they're in a large group, they keep their language. See, for example, the Romany Languages.
Aw, that's pure poppycock. The name Brandenburg is derived from "Brennaburg" or "Brennabor" wich was originally a town of the Slavic tribe of the Hevelli. It was captured by the eastern Frankish king Henry I in 928.
Gosh, where do you have all this nonsense from or do you make it up yourself?
The Israelites were taken captive by foreigeners and then invaded lands that had pre-existing peoples in them for 2000 years. No difference.
It would be misleading to say that the American culture is the cultural descendant of the Japanese culture which they left. The American culture has absorbed a lot of groups and been through a lot of history. It is the synthesis of all that.
Europe was similar then. You're the one saying it should be culurally Hebrew. We're saying they are genetically descended from Israelites, not culturally. They were taken captive.
What I'm reading on this thread, that some group called "the Lost Tribes of Israel" later emerged as "the Celts," describes some different process, a story which no one has told but the outline of which makes no sense. To say you emerge "as" some other group means that the other group did not exist until you became them.
Israelite colonies were established by the tribe of Dan before the captivities. Those were probably what you called Celts.
That's where the putative language shift looks bad. If you aren't absorbed by some pre-existing group, you don't lose your language. If you are so absorbed, the "new" culture is actually pre-existing and the new language is the dominant culture's language. If you get taken as a captive into Egypt, your new language is Egyptian, not Celtic.
This is a senseless argument because languages change over short periods of time. You're trying to track the movements of peoples of the world over thousandsof years by language alone and it can't be done. You don't know the circumstances of the environments then.
You can say that some group migrated from A to B and was completely absorbed. That basically requires no evidence as it wouldn't be expected to leave much if any. But it's also a non-event. Culture B is there in any case and probably little changed.
But different peoples have different tendencies. Even though they've had to adopt a different language they still are genetically descended from a certain people that have different characteristics from the natives.
I also note that the term of art "the Celts"--as used on this thread by LostTribe at least--includes groups that I've never ever seen identified as Celts anywhere else. This whole thing is so askew with any version of history known outside this thread that I hardly know why I bother.
I never study the "Celts". I don't like combining the Assyrians with the Israelites, I believe they stayed separated even though they were in close proximity with each other. As opposed to language, I believe a much more accurate way to identify who is who is by studying the historical records of the time and using logic.
You've got it right. You need a story for where Celtic comes from, although we now see that Celtic is also German, except for some of these people the Germans were the Assyrians whereas the Celts were the Hebrews ...
This muddle needs a bit of work before it can go on the Art Bell show.
I got it from the Roman scribes of the time. They said the Assyrians migrated to the area north of the Black Sea.
Not to mention Yiddish, even when members of the Two Tribes (Judah and Benjamin, + some Levites) learned second languages during two millenia of diaspora.
This is a scoop. I guess Latin is Celtic too? And Greek? How about Persian? How about Hittite? How about Sanskrit? If not all of the preceding, why not?
It doesn't matter how I feel about it, it's a fact. The euro and the dollar rule the currencies and the American and British navies rule the seas. We dominate. It's a fact.
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.