Tag Archive for anthropology

From Frontiers of Anthropology: The Atlantean Pre-Sanscrit (Free E-Book)

Egypt. Pyramids of Gizeh. The Great Pyramid. Reflecting pyramid mounted camelman. SOURCE: Library of Congress. (Public Domain)

From Frontiers of Anthropology Sunday, October 20, 2013

The Atlantean Pre-Sanscrit

Copyright 2013 Alexander PutneySanskrit

Paleolithic stone and ceramic artifacts from around the world preserve a great wealth of information concerning the highly advanced Atlantean civilization and the cataclysmic events that crashed their worldwide pyramid network, thrusting terrestrial humanity into darkness and segregation from those residing below in vast, climate-controlled subterranean cities. Enigmatic phrases from hundreds of Paleo-Sanskrit artifacts reveal the advanced aerial and spaceflight technologies of our great ancestral civilization known as Atlantis. The hieroglyphic languages of Sumer, Egypt and the Maya are descendant languages of the diaspora that followed the cataclysmic destruction of Atlantis, which today lies hidden, thousands of feet below the ocean’s surface, covered in the silt residues of millennia. High Vedic physics knowledge concerning psychoacoustics and planetary infrasound resonance are expressed in the direct language of the ancient hieroglyphs, as resolved by the breakthrough decipherment of expert epigrapher Professor Kurt Schildmann. His definitive translations provide insight into the Atlantean origin of so-called UFO phenomena, including ‘alien’ abduction, livestock mutilation and subterran civilizations. (Free eBook, 203 pgs. – 92.9mb PDF)

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George Washington University Professor’s Research on Ancient Ballgame Reveals More about Early Mesoamerican Society

from George Washington University

GW Anthropology Professor Jeffrey Blomster’s Research Featured in PNAS Journal

May 8, 2012

WASHINGTON-George Washington University Professor Jeffrey P. Blomster’s latest research explores the importance of the ballgame to ancient Mesoamerican societies. Dr. Blomster’s findings show how the discovery of a ballplayer figurine in the Mixteca Alta region of Oaxaca demonstrates the early participation of the region in the iconography and ideology of the game, a point that had not been previously documented by other researchers. Dr. Blomster’s paper, Early evidence of the ballgame in Oaxaca, Mexico, is featured in the latest issue of Proceedings in the National Academies of Science (PNAS).

Dr. Blomster, GW associate professor of anthropology, has spent 20 years researching the origin of complex societies in Mesoamerica. The participation of early Mixtec societies in ballgame imagery is a new aspect of his research. For the journal publication, Dr. Blomster worked with undergraduate students Izack Nacheman and Joseph DiVirgilio to create artistic renditions of the figurine artifacts found in Mexico.

While early games used a hard rubber ball, the ballgames Dr. Blomster researches bear little resemblance to today’s Major League Baseball. . . . read complete report