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Announcements & General Jabber => General Jabber => Anthropology => Topic started by: Br.IanVonTurpie on Fri 13 Nov 2015

Title: Aincient Australian stone circles, were they made by Abos?
Post by: Br.IanVonTurpie on Fri 13 Nov 2015
http://wakeup-world.com/2013/09/16/australias-stonehenge (http://wakeup-world.com/2013/09/16/australias-stonehenge/)

According to Frederic Slater, who was the President of the Australian Archaeological and Education Research Society, an Original stone arrangement he and a colleague were investigating throughout 1939 is "the Stonehenge of Australia." Assumed to be lost for the last 63 years, this impressive and complex sandstone arrangement is much more than a collection of rocks, signs and symbols positioned on a mound. According to Slater, "the mound is one of the oldest; I should say the oldest, forms of temples in the world, and dates back to the... advent of first man."

Not only was the mound the first temple, the narrative and wisdom it chronicles is as profound as it is sublime, so much so that Slater claimed it formed "the basis of all knowledge, all science, all history and all forms of writing."

These are extremely bold claims to make; to suggest that the very first language was spoken and recorded in stone in Australia carries with it many inconvenient historical implications. Modern humanity is assumed to have had its genesis in Africa. We are told a few restless inquisitive souls set foot outside African soil some 60,000 years ago and spread their culture and genes. In this theoretical construct, there is no room for Australia to be anything other than an afterthought and merely an African colony peopled by mariners who surely spoke before setting sail to Australia.

(http://forgottenorigin.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/Stone-Circle._rapvue14.jpg)

Bulldozing Australia's History

Despite the unpopular stance advocated by Slater, his research was meticulous and the methodology sound. More to the point, such was the strength of the case he made on behalf of this arrangement being the First Language, in 1940 representatives of the Australian Government approached the farmer and threatened to confiscate his land because of these rocks. The landholder under threat was openly sympathetic to the archaeology being done, but realised while the stones stood he would lose his land, income and livelihood. Within days of the threat by Government, the stones were reluctantly bulldozed and the land was left alone. Slater had lost his proof and not another supporting public statement was made. The whole unpleasant episode was expunged from the public arena and Slater's correspondence was apparently lost or destroyed.

And so this historical vacuum remained... until about three months ago when local teacher Richard Patterson was rummaging through some discarded files in the back room of the local Historical Society. Amongst the accumulation of papers and documents were Slater's letters to his on-field colleague. Soon after, Richard contacted our research team, and so the unraveling has began.