Library of Atlantis – Telegram
Library of Atlantis
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Ancient history, particularly the mysterious and anomalous bits
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Forwarded from THE SPECTRAL REVOLUTION
Turn, turn, turn your constellation
Spinning gears of all creation
Reach into your heart
To feel the pulse of electricity
The currency of Truth is so
Dilating, then your circuit trips;
Now your light is radiating,
Have a nice Apocalypse!

- Spectral Valkyrie
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Forwarded from Deleted Account
This is an interesting mystery i keep pondering:

The swastika is at least 10,000 years old, shown in the example found at Mezzine in Ukraine

The popular theory is that the swastika represents the big dipper's motion around Polaris at each of the four cardinal moments of the year (solstices and equinoxes)

However Polaris didnt become the pole star until many thousands of years after the first example of a swastika is found.

So whats the true meaning?
Artifacts attributed to the Diquis culture of Costa Rica, dated 300 BC - 1500 AD
Lol these Aztec dudes in the codices look like Simpsons characters
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Forwarded from caseus
Sibero-Scythian gold
Forwarded from Deleted Account
I just learned about another Prometheus analogue that I was unaware of, Pkharmat (Caucasus/Vainakh/Chechen)

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pkharmat
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Did you know Britain kickstarted the Bronze age?

The oldest evidence of tin ore mining in Europe is in Britain.

Around 2200 BC Britain's Beaker folk switched from using copper tools, to tin rich Bronze and the rest of Europe followed afterwards. Britain started Europe's Bronze Age.

tin-Bronze was in use earlier in Anatolia (3000 BC), and relied first on meagre local tin deposits but later on tin mines in Central Asia, but even in 2200 BC, half the metal objects in Anatolia were still just made of copper.

But later on, even West Asia switched to using British tin, and it became the main producer of tin ingots for all the Mediterranean.

You're welcome.
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Details of the pressblech foils used to decorate a 7th century sword scabbard found in a male burial at Gutenstein, Baden-Wurttemberg,, Germany. It depicts a were-wolf warrior of Wotan.

This is a copy held at the Landesmuseum in Stuttgart. The original was (like many other early medieval treasures) looted by the red army from Berlin in 1945 and is now held in the Pushkin Museum, Moscow.

Photos by Matt Bunker