It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by Komonazmuk
Did the head craftsman call in sick on this day?
Originally posted by STARTRUTH49
reply to post by BlackProjects
Very interesting. It would seem that we have African atrifacts in America. Possibly long ago, the Maya had these kind of artifacts and some that were saved from the spanish invaders or were hidden in a cave by those that stole these items or someone else brought these artifacts to america a long time ago. Some years back they found egyptian mumies in the USA. The Maya were in my view closley connected to Egypt and much of what was from the ancient world was pillage and plundered, the rest remains hidden in tunnels within the earth and new discoveries are going to keep making headlines, never on the news but rather on the internet.
Its always difficult to see the truth because its unbelievable sometimes
CNN September 20, 1999 Brazilian fossil bears African features, could challenge theories on settlement RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) -- Anthropologists in Rio unveiled the oldest known human fossil from the Americas Monday, a woman's skull with African features that could revolutionize theories on the continent's early inhabitants. The fossil -- first discovered in Brazil in 1975 but only recently found to come from a woman who lived 11,500 years ago -- shows there were human beings on the continent long before Asian immigration, said anthropologist Ricardo Ventura Santos. "This is a piece that in practice is important toward understanding ... the settlement of the Americas," said Ventura Santos, of the National Museum and the prestigious Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ). "There's a lot of curiosity about it, that's why we're showing it to the media today." Scientists dubbed the woman "Luiza," Brazil's answer to the famed "Lucy," just over a year ago when new methods proved she was the earliest known American. Luiza's namesake is a 3.2 million-year-old human ancestor found in Ethiopia and now on display in a Paris museum. Scientists say Luiza was a nomad who wandered with about a dozen relatives in an area of what is now central Brazil, eating the natural vegetation or on occasion animal meat. She died at around age 20 in some sort of accident. Before Luiza's appearance, paleontologists had been working on the theory that the earliest Americans were the Asian ancestors of the Indians that European colonizers encountered when they arrived on the American continents 500 years ago. These ancestors would have come from what we now know as Siberia and Mongolia and crossed the Bering Straight between Asia and North America on a glacial bridge at the end of the last Ice Age. About a year ago, archeologist Walter Neves, one of the few specialists in human paleontology in Brazil, took an interest in the unusual shape of Luiza's skull, which had been packed away for decades in the museum's vast archives. He believed the skull, which had been originally dug up from a 43-foot deep cavern in the Brazilian state of Minas Gerais, showed Negroid features rather than the Mongoloid www.latinamericanstudies.org...edit on 29-3-2013 by Spider879 because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by Komonazmuk
Did the head craftsman call in sick on this day?
Originally posted by ballymoney50
reply to post by samkam
everythings a hoax that can't be explained