Unknown
Aug 22, 2005, 07:28 AM
Hi
Most of you are longer term authors than I am. I have made many
mistakes in
the last few years.
Finally it seems there is a low cost provider who does not take the
lion's
share of the revenue who also will work with the on-line retailers and
produce quality perfect bound printing on a Print on Demand basis. In
fact
it can cost absolutely nothing for the author willing to use their
quality
gallery of covers.
Here is the addy to my storefront -
http://www.lulu.com/gaianinstituteofarcaneknowledgeI will be producing four CDs with 15 to 20 books each plus a
compilation
anthology in the next short while as well.
I think as the market continues to see people go direct to the consumer
with
more truthful and un-censored work there will be great improvements for
the
author and society at large.
Robert Bruce Baird (Bob)
Robert Bruce Baird
May 14, 2006, 07:16 AM
Dear Bob
Here it is. Too much? Probably, lol.
Sandy
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Dear Professor Hayashida
My name is Sandra Repash and I am writing on behalf of our Paleolithic Anthropology research team. During the course of our research on ancient civilization smelting technology, I came across your Penn Sate website and read through your 2003 paper entitled 'Bridging the gap between archaelogy and the physical sciences. Hyperfine Interactions 150: 7-11.'
Your expertise in the area of Inca Technology and the multi-disciplinary collaborations you point out in your paper are particularly relevant to our research. We are in need of an invasive burn test and/or a mass spectrometry test (AMS if possible) on our metal artifact from the Kanawha River Valley region of West Virginia.
Ideally, the test should be performed (or interpreted) by an informed metallurgist willing to relate to ancient metal working. We are in that group of researchers who hope to answer questions using archaeometric techniques through the collaborative efforts of archaeologists and physical scientists in the analysis and interpretation of the technology of ancient objects (as you mentioned in your paper).
Mass Spectrometry should tell us more about the content - i.e., if the aluminum is of a certain purity or compostion which is not found in early smelting, or whether the compostion could be the result of ancient smelting techniques. Our goal is to establish the era of our artifacts in connection with the ancient history of North America. A large part of our research involves North American pre-Columbian history as discussed in 'The Prehistoric Worldwide Import of the Great Lakes' by Robert Bruce Baird (also on our research team) and other authors. I include this brief quote of his regarding the results of the Electon Microscope test already completed on our artifact:
"In addition to the spalling used to extract copper and other minerals in the Lake Superior region since the last Ice Age and the testing I had done on the metal sent to me (Electroscopy showed unusal metal formation including aluminum and zinc but folded and not evenly smelted) we have fluxing done by the Ostrogoth/Incas.
I believe this fluxing is what allowed the Figuig or Melungeon to make the artifact in an area people had been coming to since a time equal to Topper (60,000 years)." (end of quote).
At this time we do not have access to mass spectrometry testing and it is our hope that you might consider a volunteer or student group at your University to perform the test and have the results interpreted by academics with related expertise. Our artifact is small - approximately one by two inches. I can personally deliver it , or if you prefer I can send it through my local Penn State campus in Fogelsville, PA. We sincerely appreciate any assistance you may be able to provide toward the advancement of this history and I thank you for taking the time to read through this request.
Sincerely,
Sandra Repash
I am including three references in the following just to give you an idea of the scope of our research:
1) An abstract from an Army Corps of Engineer paper on The Kanawha River Valley region of West Virginia.
2). Five brief excerpts from the Table of Contents to 'The Prehistoric Worldwide Import of the Great Lakes' by Robert Baird.
3). An excerpt from the introduction to 'The Incas and the Prince of Palenque' by Robert Baird.
You may also be familiar with similar studies by Ann Kendall ('The Everyday Life of the Incas', published by Batsford in London and Putnam in New York, 1973), and the work of Gene Savoy in Peru (beginning with his classic 'The Search for the Lost Cities of the Amazon').
Robert Bruce Baird's work (about 20 books on this subject) can be found at www.lulu.com, and his articles are widely distributed throughout the world. www. world-mysteries.com is only one source.
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References:
'Archeology of the Great Kanawha Navigation.'
Robert F. Maslowski, Archeologist, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (retired).
A paper presented the Fifth World Archeology Conference,
Washington, DC, June 2003
Abstract
The Great Kanawha Navigation system originally included ten Chanoine dams on the Kanawha River in southern West Virginia. The French system was completed in 1898 and provided for year-round water transportation for 90 miles of the Kanawha River from Boomer to Point Pleasant, on the Ohio River. The ten locks and dams were replaced with four high lift dams with German roller gates in the early 1930s. Gallipolis was built on the Ohio River and Winfield, Marmet and London were built on the Kanawha. Beginning in 1989 three of these Locks and Dams were improved by adding additional lock chambers. Land required for these improvements totaled 1854 acres and included 69 archeological sites. Twenty of these sites (29%) were determined eligible for the National Register. Fourteen sites required data recovery. Six sites including the Clover National Historic Landmark were preserved and three sites were partially preserved. The cultural components at these sites included much of the prehistory and history of the Kanawha Valley and southern West Virginia from Late Paleo Indian to A. D. 1900. Data recovery resulted in major contributions to prehistoric, historic and industrial archeology and bioanthropology. This paper discusses the data recovery results, preservation efforts and public archeology.
Prehistoric Archeology
In the course of prehistory Appalachia was occupied by a fairly uniform Paleo-Indian culture by 10,500 BC. Regionalization gradually occurred during the Archaic period and by 1000 BC central Appalachia was a multi-cultural area and continues to be so into the present.
Two sites in the project areas produced Paleo Indian artifacts (10,500 BC). The base of a Clovis point associated with mound fill was recovered from the Kirk Mound, a plowed down mound excavated as part of the RC Byrd Project (Niquette et al. 1988). Two Late Paleo points (9000 BC) were recovered from the basal layers of the Van Bibber Reynolds site at Marmet.
(end of abstract).
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'The Prehistoric Worldwide Import of the Great Lakes' by Robert Bruce Baird:
Table of Contents:
CHAPTER ONE: From Hell' and Back.
- The Canadian Encyclopedia says: “The ancestors of the Iroquois can be traced backwards in New York State by archaeological evidence to at least 500 BC. And possibly as far back as 4,000 BC. The distinctive Iroquois culture of the historic period seems to have developed by about 1000 AD.” In order to take the Iroquois back to 4000 BC one has to find the Megwi and Adena before them were once people who lived in Poverty Point where Eurasiatic technology existed and tall people thrived in the Keltic mound building tradition.
CHAPTER TWO: Manitou’s Mounds and Mississippi Mud.
- Professor Jesse Jennings who wrote what the Smithsonian called ‘authoritative’ in its third edition says: “…are all the high cultures of the New World resultant from a diffusion of ideas, customs, artifacts, and religious-social practices of the OLD WORLD?”
- He also says: “Even more unusual at the two sites was the microflint work. The industry involved the striking of long, prismatic flakes from egg-shaped flint nodules or cores in a manner reminiscent of Eurasiatic Mesolithic industries.”
CHAPTER THREE: Guardians of the Iberian Gateway (ST. Lawrence, Hudson).
- J.V. Wright is one of Canada's top academics and he wrote A History of the Native People’s of Canada, Volume I, (10,000 - 1,000 B.C.) and he says: "Historically documented native beliefs in Canada appear to have been quite similar to those of the pre-Christian Celtic, Germanic, and Scandinavian peoples as well as other parts of the world…”
- He also brings us: The Allumette-1 and Morrison's Island-6 sites, in addition to other activities, they functioned as manufacturing centres of copper tools.
CHAPTER FOUR: The Great Wall of China Extends to Ohio's 'Giants'.
- Elizabeth Wayland Barber's The Mummies of Urumchi says: "Linguistically these twins show features lumping them most closely with the 'westernmost' Indo-European languages: Celtic and Italic…. But they are not particularly similar to their nearest geographical neighbors…”
- Also, she states: "What Professor Mair {University of Pennsylvania} recognized there stunned him. The mummies appeared to be neither Chinese nor Mongoloid in facial type; they looked, in fact, distinctively “Caucasian”…”
CHAPTER FIVE: Peru Shakes Hands With Poverty Point.
- "The rise and fall of Celtic sea power has been strangely neglected! Nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, most of Book III of Caesar's De Bello Gallico is devoted to the greatest naval battle he was ever called upon to mount. No less than 220 ships, all larger than and superior in construction to those of the opposing Roman navy under Admiral Brutus.” These words from Professor Barraclough Fell set the truth in motion of worldwide travel and trade that the Kelts were involved in for many millennia.
- He is the champion of many and the outcast of his Harvard ‘cronies’ and other academics. There is no part of this planet were we will not show the Kelts or 'keltoi'.
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And excerpt from the Introduction to
'The Incas and the Prince of Palenque' by Robert Bruce Baird:
Myths can be created through ignorance and miss-translation or many other things, as well as propaganda for the purposes of those who desire power or to manage their people. A book called The Incredible Incas from 1973 (Carleton Beals) provides us with some things I hope to de-construct in general before you read the whole book to see why it is in reality either a myth or propaganda.
"Today the word Inca has come to be applied to all the peoples. In this region, but long ago, it referred to the emperor and to the ruling nobility. The Incas established their supremacy over the Quechua Indians nearly a thousand years ago and built the great stone city of Cuzco, ‘the center of the world.’ Gradually, they extended their dominion for thousands of miles north to Ecuador and southern Colombia, south to all Bolivia, upland Argentina, and Chile; west to where the great peoples of the coast had built palaces and mighty irrigation works; and east to the delightful yungas, or valleys, of the Andes and on to the jungles of Brazil. One emperor sailed out with a large force to the Galapagos Islands in the Pacific, land of the huge turtles." (2)
First of all we learn something important when Carleton Beals writes and tells us that the people were not Incas. Only the nobles were Incas. These nobles are Heliopolitans or people who understood the science of Harmonics and the Universal Harmonic of Light. You can call them Luciferians or Venus worshipers in other places and other times. They are Ostro (bright or Light) Goths as you will see. We see they were stone-masons and built a city out of stone and this is important as those who know Phre (Fire and the light of the sun) is the real root of Free in Freemasonry.
He tells us a little about irrigation works and if you know about the Etruscans or Cretans who developed these technologies long ago you might ask why he makes no mention of this. He would not know some things that archaeology has proven since he wrote his book in 1973. One of these things is the knowledge that Crete had Hybrid grains (Hybrid not merely gathered or grown) 5,000 years before the supposed Cradle of Civilization in the land of the Bible myths, had agriculture of the rudimentary sort. Who were the Etruscans and Cretans of that era? Jacobsen's work at the Bay of Argos tells us those same people were accomplished mariners who traveled far and wide 13,000 years ago.
(end of excerpt).