quarta-feira, 20 de junho de 2012
Sacerdotes ou Astronautas? (¿Sacerdotes o Cosmonautas?)
Info On Andreas Faber-Kaiser (in spanish...):
Andreas Faber-Kaiser (Barcelona, 5 de abril de 1944 - ibídem, 14 de marzo de 1994) fue un ufólogo y escritor germano-español especializado en la investigación de los aspectos misteriosos y ocultos de nuestra historia, sobre todo en la relación existente de los dioses de la antigüedad con los actuales ovnis, habiendo participado como ponente en numerosos congresos internacionales dedicados a este tipo de temáticas, tanto en Europa como en América.
Biografía
Nació en Barcelona el 5 de abril de 1944, se licenció en Filosofía y letras, obteniendo en 1972 el Premio Nacional de Astronáutica «Julio Marial» por su estudio Repercusión de la astronáutica en la vida del hombre. En 1976 fundó la revista Mundo Desconocido[1] en colaboración con el también desaparecido periodista e investigador argentino Alejandro Vignati, considerada en su momento a nivel mundial como una de las tres primeras publicaciones en su género, y galardonada en 1980 con el premio «Secinter» a la mejor revista especializada. Dejó de publicarse en noviembre de 1982, si bién siguió operando desde entonces como red de investigación internacional, financiando diversos estudios. En verano de 1988 presentó en Catalunya Ràdio el programa ¿Què volen aquesta gent?[2] (¿Que quiere esta gente?), un programa dedicado al mundo de los ovnis. Desde su fundación en 1989 y hasta mayo de 1992 fue Consejero Editorial y Coordinador Internacional de la revista Más Allá de la Ciencia, revista publicada por MC Ediciones y dedicada al mundo del misterio, del esoterismo y la ufología, asimismo también fue Consejero Editorial de JC Ediciones S.A. De 1988 a 1994 dirigió y presentó en Catalunya Ràdio el programa Sintonia Alfa,[2] espacio centrado en temas ufológicos y misteriosos, alternándolo con el programa especial Arxiu Secret[2] (Archivo Secreto).
En agosto de 1992 abrió como primer ponente el Curso Especializado en Extensión Cultural : “Grandes Enigmas: Los Ovnis”, organizado por la Universidad Complutense de Madrid dentro de sus Cursos de Verano y dirigido por J. J. Benítez, constituyendo el primer curso de ufología celebrado en una universidad española.
Sus viajes de investigación le llevaron a buena parte de Europa, Asia, América y Oceanía, consecuencia de ellos son la publicación de algunos de sus libros, como el pólemico Jesús vivió y murió en Cachemira (1976). Un libro donde exponía la posibilidad de que Jesús de Nazaret no hubiera muerto en la cruz, sino que una vez curado de sus graves heridas causadas durante la crucifixión huyera hacia el este en busca de las tribus perdidas de Israel y una vez en Cachemira hubiera comenzado una nueva vida muriendo a un edad muy avanzada de muerte natural.
No menos controvertido fue su libro Pacto de silencio (1988), un libro sobre el Síndrome tóxico, una enfermedad aparecida en 1981 y causada oficialmente por el consumo de aceite de colza desnaturalizado[n. 1] ,consecuencia del fraude alimenticio realizado por unos comerciantes aceiteros, que lo distribuían en venta ambulante como aceite de oliva[n. 2] ,causando 1.100 muertos[n. 3] y más de 60.000 afectados. En este libro intenta demostrar que la causa del Síndrome tóxico no fue el aceite de colza, que era totalmente inocuo, sino la ingesta de tomates tratados con una combinación nematicida organotiofosforada (pesticidas), concretamente con Nemacur® (fenamiphos) y Oftanol® (isofenphos) de la multinacional Bayer, en un ensayo de guerra química pepetrado seguramente por el gobierno de los Estados Unidos.
En su último artículo, publicado en el número 56 (octubre de 1993) de la revista Más Allá de la Ciencia, bajo el título de "Confesiones de Andreas Faber-Kaiser entre la vida y la muerte", reconoció que era portador del virus del sida, sin poderse explicar cómo había podido introducirse en el interior de su cuerpo, y relacionándolo con sus investigaciones sobre el Síndrome tóxico, ya que tanto él como otros investigadores y médicos que intentaron avanzar realmente en el origen de esta extraña dolencia murieron o padecerieron súbitas y extrañas enfermedades.[3]
Andreas Faber-Kaiser murió de sida en el hospital barcelonés de Can Ruti (Hospital Universitario Germans Trias i Pujol) el 14 de marzo de 1994 a los 49 años de edad.
Obras
¿Sacerdotes o cosmonautas? (1971)
Cosmos-Cronología general de la Astronáutica (1972)
Grandes enigmas del Cielo y de la Tierra (1973)
Jesús Vivió y murió en Cachemira (1976)
OVNIs: el archivo de la CIA - Documentación y memorandos (1980)
OVNIs: el archivo de la CIA - Informes de avistamientos (1980)
OVNIs: archivos americanos - Documentos militares y de inteligencia (1980)
La caverna de los tesoros (1984)
Las nubes del engaño [Crónica extrahumana antigua] (1984)
Fuera de control [Crónica extrahumana moderna] (1984)
Sobre el secreto [La isla mágica de Pohnpei y el secreto de Nan Matol] (1985)
Pacto de silencio (1988)
El muñeco humano (1989)
Extracts Source: http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andreas_Faber-Kaiser
More Info: http://andreas.faber.cat/ - http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/vida_alien/revelacion_cosmos/faber.htm - http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extraterrestre - http://www.sebodomessias.com.br/sebo/(S(qvphj4452z20nmz4ym1foh45))/detalheproduto.aspx?idItem=338644
No Rasto de... Os Astronautas do Passado (The Stairway to Heaven)
Info On Zecharia Sitchin:
Zecharia Sitchin (July 11, 1920 – October 9, 2010[1]) was an Azerbaijani-born American author of books proposing an explanation for human origins involving ancient astronauts. Sitchin attributes the creation of the ancient Sumerian culture to the Anunnaki, which he states was a race of extra-terrestrials from a planet beyond Neptune called Nibiru. He believed this hypothetical planet of Nibiru to be in an elongated, elliptical orbit in the Earth's own Solar System, asserting that Sumerian mythology reflects this view. Sitchin's books have sold millions of copies worldwide and have been translated into more than 25 languages.
Sitchin's ideas were rejected by scientists and academics, who dismiss his work as pseudoscience and pseudohistory. Sitchin's work has been criticized for flawed methodology and mistranslations of ancient texts as well as for incorrect astronomical and scientific claims.[2]
Ideas and works
Similarly to earlier authors such as Immanuel Velikovsky and Erich von Däniken, Sitchin advocated hypotheses in which extraterrestrial events supposedly played a significant role in ancient human history.
According to Sitchin's interpretation of Mesopotamian iconography and symbology, outlined in his 1976 book The 12th Planet and its sequels, there is an undiscovered planet beyond Neptune that follows a long, elliptical orbit, reaching the inner solar system roughly every 3,600 years. This planet is called Nibiru (although Jupiter was the planet associated with the god Marduk in Babylonian cosmology).[5] According to Sitchin, Nibiru (whose name was replaced with MARDUK in original legends by the Babylonian ruler of the same name in an attempt to co-opt the creation for himself, leading to some confusion among readers) collided catastrophically with Tiamat (a goddess in the Babylonian creation myth the Enûma Eliš), which he considers to be another planet once located between Mars and Jupiter. This collision supposedly formed the planet Earth, the asteroid belt, and the comets. Sitchin states that when struck by one of planet Nibiru's moons, Tiamat split in two, and then on a second pass Nibiru itself struck the broken fragments and one half of Tiamat became the asteroid belt. The second half, struck again by one of Nibiru's moons, was pushed into a new orbit and became today's planet Earth.
According to Sitchin, Nibiru (called "the twelfth planet" because, Sitchin claimed, the Sumerians' gods-given conception of the Solar System counted all eight planets, plus Pluto, the Sun and the Moon) was the home of a technologically advanced human-like extraterrestrial race called the Anunnaki in Sumerian myth, who Sitchin states are called the Nephilim in Genesis. He wrote that they evolved after Nibiru entered the solar system and first arrived on Earth probably 450,000 years ago, looking for minerals, especially gold, which they found and mined in Africa. Sitchin states that these "gods" were the rank-and-file workers of the colonial expedition to Earth from planet Nibiru.
Sitchin wrote that Enki suggested that to relieve the Anunnaki, who had mutinied over their dissatisfaction with their working conditions, that primitive workers (Homo sapiens) be created by genetic engineering as slaves to replace them in the gold mines by crossing extraterrestrial genes with those of Homo erectus.[6][7] According to Sitchin, ancient inscriptions report that the human civilization in Sumer, Mesopotamia, was set up under the guidance of these "gods", and human kingship was inaugurated to provide intermediaries between mankind and the Anunnaki (creating the "divine right of kings" doctrine). Sitchin believes that fallout from nuclear weapons, used during a war between factions of the extraterrestrials, is the "evil wind" described in the Lament for Ur that destroyed Ur around 2000 BC. Sitchin states the exact year is 2024 BC.[8] Sitchin says that his research coincides with many biblical texts, and that biblical texts come originally from Sumerian writings.
Popularity
Since the release of his first book The 12th Planet in 1976, now in its 45th printing, Zecharia Sitchin has written seven other books as part of his Earth Chronicles series, as well as six other companion books, all of which are still in print as of 2010[update]. Sitchin's books have sold millions of copies worldwide and been published in more than 25 languages, as well as in braille.[9] New York Times reporter Corey Kilgannon noted that despite academic dismissal of his work, Sitchin has "a devoted following of readers".[3]
Critic Michael Heiser called Sitchin "arguably the most important proponent of the ancient astronaut hypothesis over the last several decades".[10] Sitchin was a frequent guest on the Coast to Coast AM radio show, which in 2010 presented Sitchin with a lifetime achievement award.[11] Gods of the New Millennium author Alan F. Alford admits he initially became "infatuated" with Sitchin's hypotheses but later became a critic of Sitchin's interpretations of myth.[12]
According to some writers, Sitchin's ideas along with those of Erich von Däniken may have influenced the beliefs of the religious sect of Raëlism,[13][14] and writer Mark Pilkington sees the mythology of Japan's Pana Wave religious group as rooted in Sitchins The 12th Planet and its sequels.[15]
The 1994 movie Stargate, directed by Roland Emmerich, and the 2009 video game The Conduit drew some conceptual inspiration from Sitchin's ideas,[16][17] while screenwriter Roberto Orci says the villains of the film Cowboys & Aliens were inspired by Sitchin's conceptualization of the Anunnaki as gold-mining aliens.[18]
Criticisms
Criticism of Sitchin's work falls primarily into three categories: translations and interpretations of ancient texts; astronomical and scientific observations; and literalism of myth.
Translations and interpretations
When Sitchin wrote his books, only specialists could read the Sumerian language. However, sources such as the 2006 book Sumerian Lexicon[19] have made the language more accessible to non-experts. Ancient language scholar Michael S. Heiser[20] states he has found many inaccuracies in Sitchin's translations and challenges interested parties to use this book to check their validity.[15][21] Prof. Ronald H. Fritze,[22] author of the book Invented Knowledge: False History, Fake Science and Pseudo-religions,[22] mentions the example of Sitchin's claim that the Sumerian sign Din-Gir means "pure ones of the blazing rockets", adding that "Sitchin's assignment of meanings to ancient words is tendentious and frequently strained."[23] Fritze also commented on Sitchin's methodology, writing that "When critics have checked Sitchin's references, they have found that he frequently quotes out of context or truncates his quotes in a way that distorts evidence in order to prove his contentions. Evidence is presented selectively and contradictory evidence is ignored."[23]
Sitchin bases his arguments on his personal interpretations of pre-Nubian and Sumerian texts, and the seal VA 243. Sitchin wrote that these ancient civilizations knew of a twelfth planet, when in fact they only knew five.[24] Hundreds of Sumerian astronomical seals and calendars have been decoded and recorded, and the total count of planets on each seal has been five. Seal VA 243 has 12 dots that Sitchin identifies as planets. When translated, seal VA 243 reads "You're his Servant" which is now thought to be a message from a nobleman to a servant. According to semitologist Michael S. Heiser, the so-called sun on Seal VA 243 is not the Sumerian symbol for the sun but is a star, and the dots are also stars.[24][25] The symbol on seal VA 243 has no resemblance to the hundreds of documented Sumerian sun symbols.
In a 1979 review of The Twelfth Planet, Roger W. Wescott,[26] Prof. of Anthropology and Linguistics at Drew University, Madison, New Jersey, noted Sitchin's amateurishness with respect to the primacy of the Sumerian language:
Sitchin's linguistics seems at least as amateurish as his anthropology, biology, and astronomy. On p. 370, for example, he maintains that "all the ancient languages . . . including early Chinese . . . stemmed from one primeval source -- Sumerian". Sumerian, of course, is the virtual archetype of what linguistic taxonomists call a language-isolate, meaning a language that does not fall into any of the well-known language-families or exhibit clear cognation with any known language. Even if Sitchin is referring to written rather than to spoken language, it is unlikely that his contention can be persuasively defended, since Sumerian ideograms were preceded by the Azilian and Tartarian signaries of Europe as well as by a variety of script-like notational systems between the Nile and Indus rivers.[27]
Astronomical and scientific observations
Sitchin's "planetary collision" view does superficially resemble a theory by modern astronomers—the giant impact theory of the Moon's formation about 4.5 billion years ago by a body impacting with the newly-formed Earth. However, Sitchin's proposed series of rogue planetary collisions differ in both details and timing. As with Immanuel Velikovsky's earlier Worlds in Collision thesis, Sitchin states that he has found evidence of ancient human knowledge of rogue celestial motions in a variety of mythological accounts. In Velikovsky's case, these interplanetary collisions were supposed to have taken place within the span of human existence, whereas for Sitchin these occurred during the early stages of planetary formation, but entered the mythological account passed down via the alien race which purportedly evolved on Nibiru after these encounters.
While Sitchin's scenario for the creation of the Solar System is hard to reconcile with the Earth's current small orbital eccentricity of only 0.0167, Sitchin's supporters maintain that it would explain much of Earth's peculiar early geography due to cleaving from the celestial collision, i.e., solid continents on one side and a giant ocean on the other.[citation needed]
According to former Immanuel Velikovsky assistant turned prolific critic,[28] C. Leroy Ellenberger,[28] "[Sitchin states that] from an equal start, the Nefilim evolved on Nibiru 45 million years ahead of comparable development on Earth with its decidedly more favorable environment. Such an outcome is unlikely, to say the least, since Nibiru would spend over 99% of its time beyond Pluto. Sitchin's explanation that heat from radioactive decay and a thick atmosphere keep Nibiru warm is absurd and does not address the problem of darkness in deep space. Also unexplained is how the Nefilim, who evolved long after Nibiru arrived, knew what happened when Nibiru first entered the solar system."[29]
The scenario outlined by Sitchin, with Nibiru returning to the inner solar system regularly every 3,600 years,
. . . implies an orbit with a semi-major axis of 235 astronomical units, extending from the asteroid belt to twelve times farther beyond the sun than Pluto. Elementary perturbation theory indicates that, under the most favorable circumstances of avoiding close encounters with other planets, no body with such an eccentric orbit would keep the same period for two consecutive passages. Within twelve orbits the object would be either ejected or converted to a short period object. Thus, the failed search for a trans-Plutonian planet by T.C. Van Flandern, of the U.S. Naval Observatory, which Sitchin uses to bolster his thesis, is no support at all.[29]
Sitchin in “the case of Adam’s alien genes”[30] states that 223 unique genes found by the Human Genome Sequencing Consortium are without the required predecessors on the genomic evolutionary tree. Later researchers have argued that the conclusion from the Human Genome Sequencing Consortium cannot be drawn due to a lack of a comprehensive gene database for comparison. An analysis by Salzberg identified 40 potential genes laterally transferred into the genome from prokaryotic organisms. Salzberg also argues that gene loss combined with sample size effects and evolutionary rate variation provide an alternative, more biologically plausible explanation.[31]
Literalism of myth
Peter James, co-author of the controversial book Centuries of Darkness,[32] has criticized Sitchin both for ignoring the world outside of Mesopotamia and more specifically for misunderstanding Babylonian literature:
He uses the Epic of Creation Enuma Elish as the foundation for his cosmogony, identifying the young god Marduk, who overthrows the older regime of gods and creates the Earth, as the unknown "Twelfth Planet". In order to do as he interprets the Babylonian theogony as a factual account of the birth of the other "eleven" planets. The Babylonian names for the planets are established beyond a shadow of a doubt—Ishtar was the deity of Venus, Nergal of Mars, and Marduk of Jupiter—and confirmed by hundreds of astronomical/astrological tables and treatises on clay tablets and papyri from the Hellenistic period. Sitchin merrily ignores all this and assigns unwarranted planetary identities to the gods mentioned in the theogony. For example, Apsu, attested as god of the primeval waters, becomes, of all things, the Sun! Ea, as it suits Sitchin, is sometimes planet Neptune and sometimes a spaceman. And the identity of Ishtar as the planet Venus, a central feature of Mesopotamian religion, is nowhere mentioned in the book—instead Sitchin arbitrarily assigns to Venus another deity from Enuma Elish, and reserves Ishtar for a role as a female astronaut.[33]
William Irwin Thompson comments on what he calls Sitchin's 'literalism':
What Sitchin sees is what he needs for his hypothesis. So figure 15 on page 40 is radiation therapy, and figure 71 on page 136 is a god inside a rocket-shaped chamber. If these are gods, why are they stuck with our cheap B movie technology of rockets, microphones, space-suits, and radiation therapy? If they are gods, then why can't they have some really divine technology such as intradimensional worm-hole travel, antigravity, starlight propulsion, or black hole bounce rematerializations? Sitchin has constructed what appears to be a convincing argument, but when he gets close to single images on ancient tablets, he falls back into the literalism of "Here is an image of the gods in rockets." Suddenly, ancient Sumer is made to look like the movie set for Destination Moon. Erich Von Däniken's potboiler Chariots of the Gods? has the same problem. The plain of Nazca in Peru is turned into a World War II landing strip. The gods can cross galactic distances, but by the time they get to Peru, their spaceships are imagined as World War II prop jobs that need an enormous landing strip. This literalization of the imagination doesn't make any sense, but every time it doesn't, you hear Sitchin say "There can be no doubt, but..."[34]
Extracts Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zecharia_Sitchin
More Info: http://www.sitchin.com/ - http://www.sitchiniswrong.com/ - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extraterrestrial_hypothesis - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesopotamian_mythology - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sumerian_literature
quarta-feira, 6 de junho de 2012
Registros concretos de ETs NO PASSADO (ufo especial nº 60)
General Info About The Ancient Astronauts Theory:
Some writers have proposed that intelligent extraterrestrial beings have visited Earth in antiquity or prehistory and made contact with humans. Such visitors are called ancient astronauts or ancient aliens. Proponents suggest that this contact influenced the development of human cultures, technologies and religions. A common variant of the idea is that deities from most, if not all, religions are actually extraterrestrials, and their advanced technologies were wrongly understood by primitive men as evidence of their divine status.[1][2]
These proposals have been popularized, particularly in the latter half of the 20th century, by writers such as Erich von Däniken, Giorgio A. Tsoukalos, Zecharia Sitchin, Robert K. G. Temple, David Icke and Peter Kolosimo,[3] but the idea that ancient astronauts actually existed is not taken seriously by most academics, and has received little or no credible attention in peer reviewed studies.[4] Ancient astronauts have been widely used as a plot device in science fiction.
Contents
1 Overview
2 Notable writers and publications
2.1 Erich von Däniken
2.2 Zecharia Sitchin
2.3 Robert Temple
2.4 Shklovski and Sagan
2.5 UFO religions
3 Evidence cited by proponents
3.1 Ancient religious texts
3.1.1 Ramayana
3.1.2 Book of Genesis and Book of Enoch
3.1.3 Book of Ezekiel
3.1.4 Elsewhere in the Bible
3.2 Ancient artwork
3.2.1 Nazca Lines
3.3 Ancient artifacts
3.4 Megalithic sites
3.5 Religious and cultural practises
4 Reception
5 Popular culture
6 Proponents
7 See also
8 Notes
9 References
10 Further reading
11 External links
Overview
Proponents of ancient astronaut theories often maintain that humans are either descendants or creations of extraterrestrial beings who landed on Earth thousands of years ago. An associated idea is that much of human knowledge, religion, and culture came from extraterrestrial visitors in ancient times, in that ancient astronauts acted as a "mother culture". Ancient astronaut proponents also believe that travelers from outer space known as "astronauts" or "spacemen" built many of the structures on earth such as the pyramids in Egypt and the Moai stone heads of Easter Island or aided humans in building them.[5][6]
Proponents argue that the evidence for ancient astronauts comes from supposed gaps in historical and archaeological records, and they also maintain that absent or incomplete explanations of historical or archaeological data point to the existence of ancient astronauts. The evidence is said to include archaeological artifacts that they argue are anachronistic or beyond the presumed technical capabilities of the historical cultures with which they are associated (sometimes referred to as "Out-of-place artifacts"); and artwork and legends which are interpreted as depicting extraterrestrial contact or technologies.
Certain mainstream academics have responded that gaps in contemporary knowledge of the past need not demonstrate that such speculative ancient astronaut ideas are a necessary conclusion to draw.[7] Francis Crick, the co-discoverer of the double helix structure of DNA, however strongly believed in what he called panspermia, the concept that earth was 'seeded' with life, probably in the form of bluegreen algae, by intelligent extraterrestrial species, for the purpose of ensuring life's continuity. He believed that this could have been done on any number of planets of this class, possibly using unmanned shuttles. He talks at length about this theory in his book Life Itself.[8]
Thomas Gold, a professor of astronomy, suggested a "garbage theory" for the origin of life, proposing that life on earth might have spread from a pile of waste products accidentally dumped on Earth long ago by extraterrestrials.[9]
The television series Ancient Aliens on the History channel features the main proponents in the ancient astronaut theory, and includes interviews with Giorgio A. Tsoukalos, David Childress, Erich von Däniken, Steven Greer and Nick Pope.[10]
Notable writers and publications
Paleocontact or "ancient astronaut" narratives first appear in early science fiction of the late 19th to early 20th century. The idea was proposed in earnest by Harold T. Wilkins (1954) and it received some consideration as a serious hypothesis during the 1960s, and has been mostly confined to the field of pseudoscience and pop culture since the 1970s. Ancient astronauts appear as a feature of UFO religions beginning with the Space opera in Scientology scripture (1967), followed by Raelism (1974).
Erich von Däniken
Erich von Däniken was a leading proponent of this theory in the late 1960s and early 1970s, gaining a large audience through the 1968 publication of his best-selling book Chariots of the Gods? and its sequels.
Certain artifacts and monumental constructions are claimed by von Däniken to have required a more sophisticated technological ability in their construction than that which was available to the ancient cultures who constructed them. Von Däniken maintains that these artifacts were constructed either directly by extraterrestrial visitors or by humans who learned the necessary knowledge from said visitors. These include Stonehenge, Pumapunku, the Moai of Easter Island, the Great Pyramid of Giza, and the ancient Baghdad electric batteries.
Von Däniken claims that ancient art and iconography throughout the world illustrates air and space vehicles, non-human but intelligent creatures, ancient astronauts, and artifacts of an anachronistically advanced technology. Von Däniken also claims that geographically separated historical cultures share artistic themes, which he argues imply a common origin. One such example is von Däniken's interpretation of the sarcophagus lid recovered from the tomb of the Classic-era Maya ruler of Palenque, Pacal the Great. Von Däniken claimed the design represented a seated astronaut, whereas the iconography and accompanying Maya text identifies it as a portrait of the ruler himself with the World Tree of Maya mythology.
The origins of many religions are interpreted by von Däniken as reactions to encounters with an alien race. According to his view, humans considered the technology of the aliens to be supernatural and the aliens themselves to be gods. Von Däniken claims that the oral and written traditions of most religions contain references to alien visitors in the way of descriptions of stars and vehicular objects travelling through air and space. One such is Ezekiel's revelation in the Old Testament, which Däniken interprets as a detailed description of a landing spacecraft.
Von Däniken's theories became popularized in the U.S. after the NBC-TV documentary In Search Of Ancient Astronauts hosted by Rod Serling and the movie Chariots of the Gods.
Critics argue that von Däniken misrepresented data, that many of his claims were unfounded, and that none of his core claims have been validated.[11]
Zecharia Sitchin
Zecharia Sitchin's series The Earth Chronicles, beginning with The 12th Planet, revolves around Sitchin's interpretation of ancient Sumerian and Middle Eastern texts, megalithic sites, and artifacts from around the world. He theorizes the gods of old Mesopotamia were actually astronauts from the planet "Nibiru", which Sitchin claims the Sumerians believed to be a remote "12th planet" (counting the Sun, Moon, and Pluto as planets) associated with the god Marduk. According to Sitchin, Nibiru continues to orbit our sun on a 3,600-year elongated orbit. Sitchin also suggests that the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter is the shattered remains of the ancient planet "Tiamat", which he claims was destroyed in one of Niburu's orbits through the solar system. Modern astronomy has found no evidence to support Sitchin's claims.
Sitchin claimed there are Sumerian texts which tell the story that 50 Anunnaki, inhabitants of a planet named Nibiru, came to Earth approximately 400,000 years ago with the intent of mining raw materials, especially gold, for transport back to Nibiru. With their small numbers they soon tired of the task and set out to genetically engineer laborers to work the mines. After much trial and error they eventually created homo sapiens sapiens: the "Adapa" (model man) or Adam of later mythology. Sitchin contended the Anunnaki were active in human affairs until their culture was destroyed by global catastrophes caused by the abrupt end of the last ice age some 12,000 years ago. Seeing that humans survived and all they had built was destroyed, the Anunnaki left Earth after giving humans the opportunity and means to govern themselves. Modern archaeologists and experts in the ancient Sumerian culture and language reject every one of these claims insisting Sitchin had simply invented a non-existent Sumerian mythology, that the texts and tablets which Sitchin described do not actually exist, and that the texts of ancient Sumer, Akkad, and Ugarit do not contain any of these stories or even variations on them.[12][13] It has also been pointed out that many of Sitchin's translations of Sumerian and Mesopotamian words are not consistent with Mesopotamian cuneiform bilingual dictionaries, produced by ancient Akkadian scribes.[14] The Faculty of Oriental Studies at the University of Oxford has made available an online searchable database with English translations of the entire body of Sumerian literature for comparison.[15]
Robert Temple
Robert K. G. Temple's 1976 book, The Sirius Mystery argues that the Dogon people of northwestern Mali preserved an account of extraterrestrial visitation from around 5,000 years ago. He quotes various lines of evidence, including supposed advanced astronomical knowledge inherited by the tribe, descriptions, and comparative belief systems with ancient civilizations such as ancient Egypt and Sumer. His work draws heavily on the studies of cultural anthropologists Marcel Griaule and Germaine Dieterlen.[16]
His conclusions have been criticized by scientists, who point out discrepancies within Temple's account, and suggested that the Dogon may have received some of their astronomical information recently, probably from European sources, and may have misrepresented Dogon ethnography.[17][18][19]
Shklovski and Sagan
In their 1966 book Intelligent Life in the Universe[20] astrophysicists I.S. Shklovski and Carl Sagan devote a chapter[21] to arguments that scientists and historians should seriously consider the possibility that extraterrestrial contact occurred during recorded history. However, Shklovski and Sagan stressed that these ideas were speculative and unproven.
Shklovski and Sagan argued that sub-lightspeed interstellar travel by extraterrestrial life was a certainty when considering technologies that were established or feasible in the late '60s;[22] that repeated instances of extraterrestrial visitation to Earth were plausible;[23] and that pre-scientific narratives can offer a potentially reliable means of describing contact with outsiders.[24] Additionally, Shklovski and Sagan cited tales of Oannes, a fishlike being attributed with teaching agriculture, mathematics, and the arts to early Sumerians, as deserving closer scrutiny as a possible instance of paleocontact due to its consistency and detail.[25]
In his 1979 book Broca's Brain, Sagan[26] suggested that he and Shklovski might have inspired the wave of '70s ancient astronaut books, expressing disapproval of "von Däniken and other uncritical writers" who seemingly built on these ideas not as guarded speculations but as "valid evidence of extraterrestrial contact." Sagan argued that while many legends, artifacts, and purported out-of-place artifacts were cited in support of ancient astronaut theories, "very few require more than passing mention" and could be easily explained with more conventional theories. Sagan also reiterated his earlier conclusion that extraterrestrial visits to Earth were possible but unproven, and perhaps improbable.
UFO religions
Various new religious movements including theosophy, Nation of Islam, Scientology, The Urantia Book, Raëlism, and Heaven's Gate believe in ancient and present-day contact with extraterrestrial intelligence. Many of these faiths see both ancient scriptures and recent revelations as connected with the action of aliens from other planetary systems. Sociologists and psychologists have found that UFO religions have similarities which suggest that members of these groups consciously or subliminally associate enchantment with the memes of science fiction.[27]
Evidence cited by proponents
Ancient religious texts
Proponents cite ancient mythologies to support their viewpoints based on the idea that ancient creation myths of gods who descend from the heavens to Earth to create or instruct humanity are actually representations of alien visitors, whose superior technology accounts for their reception as gods. Proponents attempt to draw an analogy to occurrences in modern times when isolated cultures are exposed to Western technology, such as when, in the early 20th century, "cargo cults" were discovered in the South Pacific: cultures who believed various Western ships and their cargo to be sent from the gods as fulfillment of prophecies concerning their return.[28]
Ramayana
In Hindu mythology, the gods and their avatars travel from place to place in flying vehicles (variously called "flying chariots", "flying cars" or Vimanas). There are many mentions of these flying machines in the Ramayana, which dates to the 5th or 4th century BCE. Below are some examples:
- From Book 6, Canto CXXIII: The Magic Car:[29]
Is not the wondrous chariot mine,
Named Pushpak, wrought by hands divine.
…
This chariot, kept with utmost care,
Will waft thee through the fields of air,
And thou shalt light unwearied down
In fair Ayodhyá's royal town.
- From Book 6, Canto CXXIV: The Departure:[29]
Swift through the air, as Ráma chose,
The wondrous car from earth arose.
And decked with swans and silver wings
Bore through the clouds its freight of kings.
Erich von Däniken discusses the Ramayana and the vimanas in Chariots of the Gods? chapter 6, suggesting that they were "space vehicles". To support his theory, he also offers a quotation which he says is from an 1889 translation of the Mahabharata by C. Roy: "Bhima flew with his Vimana on an enormous ray which was as brilliant as the sun and made a noise like the thunder of a storm".[30]
See also Vaimanika Shastra, a text on Vimanas supposedly "channeled" in the early 20th century.[31]
Book of Genesis and Book of Enoch
The Book of Genesis, chapter 6 verses 1–4, states:
When human beings began to increase in number on the earth and daughters were born to them, the sons of God saw that the daughters of humans were beautiful, and they married any of them they chose.
...
The Nephilim were on the earth in those days—and also afterward—when the sons of God went to the daughters of humans and had children by them.
— Genesis 6:1–4 (New International Version)
One interpretation is that the Nephilim are the children of the "sons of God" and "daughters of humans", although scholars are uncertain.[32] The King James Version replaces the term "Nephilim" with "giants".
The first part of the apocryphal Book of Enoch expands and interprets Genesis 6:1. It explains that the "sons of God" were a group of 200 "angels" called "Watchers". Against God's wishes, these Watchers descended to Earth to breed with humans. Their offspring are the Nephilim, "giants" who "consumed all the acquisitions of men". When humans could no longer sustain the Nephilim, they turned against humanity. The Watchers also instructed humans in metallurgy and metalworking, cosmetics, sorcery, astrology, astronomy and meteorology. God then ordered the Watchers to be imprisoned in the ground. He created the Great Flood to rid Earth of the Nephilim and of the humans who had been given knowledge by the Watchers. However, to ensure humanity's survival, Noah is forewarned of the oncoming destruction. Because they disobeyed God, the book also describes the Watchers as "fallen angels".[33]
Some ancient astronaut theorists believe that this story is a historical account of extraterrestrials visiting Earth. In their interpretation, the "angels" are extraterrestrials and were called Watchers because their mission was to observe humanity. Some of the extraterrestrials disobeyed orders; they made contact with humans, cross-bred with human females and shared knowledge with them. The Nephilim were thus half-human-half-extraterrestrial hybrids.[34]
Chuck Missler and Mark Eastman argue that modern UFOs carry the fallen angels, or offspring of fallen angels: the Nephilim of Genesis, who have now returned. They believe it was this interbreeding between the angels and humans that led to what they call "the gene pool problem." Noah was perfect in his "generations," that is "Noah's genealogy was not tarnished by the intrusion of fallen angels. It seems that this adulteration of the human gene pool was a major problem on the planet earth."[35]
Von Däniken also suggests that the two angels who visited Lot in Genesis 19 were not angels, but ancient astronauts. They may have used atomic weapons to destroy the city of Sodom. In any case, the otherworldly beings acted as if there was a time set for Sodom's destruction. Von Däniken questioned why God would work on a timetable and why an "infinitely good Father" would give "preference to 'favorite children,' such as Lot's family, over countless others."[36]
Marc Dem completely reinterprets Genesis by claiming humanity started on another planet and that the God of the Bible is an extraterrestrial.[37]
Book of Ezekiel
In the Biblical Old Testament, chapter 1 of the Book of Ezekiel recounts a vision in which Ezekiel sees "an immense cloud" that contains fire and emits lightning and "brilliant light". It continues: "The center of the fire looked like glowing metal, and in the fire was what looked like four living creatures". These creatures are described as winged and humanoid, they "sped back and forth like flashes of lightning" and "fire moved back and forth among the creatures". The passage goes on to describe four shiny objects, each appearing "like a wheel intersecting a wheel". These objects could fly and they moved with the creatures: "When the living creatures moved, the wheels beside them moved; and when the living creatures rose from the ground, the wheels also rose".[38]
In chapter 4 of Chariots of the Gods?, entitled "Was God an Astronaut?", von Däniken suggests that Ezekiel had seen a spaceship or spaceships; this hypothesis had been put forward by Morris Jessup in 1956[39] and by Arthur W. Orton in 1961.[40] A detailed version of this hypothesis was described by Josef F. Blumrich in his book The Spaceships of Ezekiel (1974).[41]
Elsewhere in the Bible
The characteristics of the Ark of the Covenant and the Urim and Thummim have been said to suggest high technology, perhaps from alien origins.[42]
Robert Dione and Paul Misraki published books in the 1960s claiming the events in the Bible were caused by alien technology.[43][44] Barry Downing, a Presbyterian minister wrote a book in 1968 claiming that Jesus was an extraterrestrial, citing (John 8: 23) and other biblical verses as evidence.[45]
Some ancient astronaut proponents such as Von Däniken and Barry Downing believe that the concept of hell in the Bible could be a real description of the planet Venus brought to earth by extraterrestrials showing photos of the hot surface on Venus to humans.[46]
Ancient artwork
Other artistic support for the ancient astronaut theory has been sought in Palaeolithic cave paintings. Wondjina in Australia and Val Camonica in Italy (seen above) are claimed to bear a resemblance to present day astronauts.[47] Supporters of the ancient astronaut theory sometimes claim that similarities such as dome shaped heads, interpreted as beings wearing space helmets, prove that early man was visited by an extraterrestrial race.[48]
More support of this theory draws upon what are claimed to be representations of flying saucers in medieval and renaissance art.[49] This is used to support the ancient astronaut theory by attempting to show that the creators of humanity return to check up on their creation throughout time.
Nazca Lines
The ancient Nazca Lines comprise hundreds of enormous ground drawings etched into the high desert landscape of Peru, which consist primarily of geometric shapes, but also include depictions of a variety of animals and at least one human figure. Many believers in ancient astronauts cite the Nazca lines as evidence because the figures created by the lines are most clearly depicted or only able to be seen when viewed from the air. Writing professor Joe Nickell of the University of Kentucky, using only technology he believed to be available to people of the time, was able to recreate one of the larger figures with a reasonable degree of accuracy.[50]
Ancient artifacts
Alleged physical evidence includes the discovery of artifacts in Egypt (the Saqqara Bird) and Colombia-Ecuador, which are claimed to be similar to modern planes and gliders,[51] although these have been interpreted by archaeologists as stylized representations of birds and insects.
Megalithic sites
Evidence for ancient astronauts is claimed to include the existence of ancient monuments and megalithic ruins such as the Giza pyramids of Egypt, Machu Picchu in Peru, or Baalbek in Lebanon, the Moai of Easter Island and Stonehenge of England.[52] Supporters contend these stone structures could not have been built with the technical abilities and tools of the people of the time and further argue that many could not be duplicated even today. They suggest that the large size of the building stones, the precision with which they were laid, and the distances many were transported leaves the question open as to who constructed these sites. These contentions are categorically rejected by mainstream archeology. Some mainstream archeologists have participated in experiments to move large megaliths. These experiments have succeeded in moving megaliths up to at least 40 tons,[53][54] and they have speculated that with a larger workforce larger megaliths could be towed with ancient technology.[55] Such allegations are not unique in history, however, as similar reasoning lay behind the wonder of the Cyclopean masonry walling at Mycenaean cities in the eyes of Greeks of the following "Dark Age," who believed that the giant Cyclopes had built the walls.
Religious and cultural practises
A number of ancient cultures, such as the Ancient Egyptians and some Native Americans, artificially lengthened the skulls of their children. Some ancient astronaut theorists propose that this was done to emulate extraterrestrial visitors, whom they saw as gods.[56][57] Among the ancient rulers depicted with elongated skulls are pharaoh Akhenaten and Nefertiti. It has been pointed out that the Grey aliens described by many alien abductees have similarly shaped heads.[56] In the program Ancient Aliens it was suggested that the owners of the biggest of the lengthened skulls may be human-extraterrestrial hybrids.[56]
Reception
Despite the proponents' own interpretations of ancient writings and artifacts, there has yet to be found any evidence to support the ancient astronaut hypothesis.
Alan F. Alford, author of Gods of the New Millennium (1996), was an adherent of the ancient astronaut theory. Much of his work draws on Sitchin's theories. However, he now finds fault with Sitchin's theory after deeper analysis, stating that: "I am now firmly of the opinion that these gods personified the falling sky; in other words, the descent of the gods was a poetic rendition of the cataclysm myth which stood at the heart of ancient Near Eastern religions."[58]
The Christian creationist community is highly critical of many of the ancient astronaut ideas, the young earth creationist author Clifford A. Wilson published Crash Go the Chariots in 1972 in which he attempted to discredit all claims made in Von Daniken's book Chariots of the Gods.[59]
In a 2004 article in Skeptic magazine,[60] Jason Colavito claims that von Däniken plagiarized many of the book's concepts from Le Matin des Magiciens (Morning of the Magicians), that this book in turn was heavily influenced by the Cthulhu Mythos, and that the core of the ancient astronaut theory originates in H. P. Lovecraft's short stories "The Call of Cthulhu" and "At the Mountains of Madness".
Popular culture
Ancient astronaut theory has been used as background or main topic in many fictional works such as Lovecraft's short story The Call of Cthulhu (1926), the movie Stargate (1994), the TV show Earth: Final Conflict, and innumerable comic books, manga books and video games.
Proponents
Many publications have argued for some variant of ancient astronaut theory. Notable examples include:
1919: Charles Fort (book, The Book of the Damned)
1954: Harold T. Wilkins (book, Flying Saucers from the Moon)
1956: Morris K. Jessup (book, UFOs and the Bible)
1957: Peter Kolosimo (book, Il pianeta sconosciuto (The Unknown Planet))
1958: George Hunt Williamson (book, Secret Places of the Lion)
1958: Henri Lhote[61] (book, The Search for the Tassili Frescoes: The story of the prehistoric rock-paintings of the Sahara)
1959: Matest M. Agrest
1959: Jacques Bergier and Louis Pauwels (book, The Morning of the Magicians)
1960: Brinsley Le Poer Trench (book, The Sky People)
1963: Robert Charroux (book, One Hundred Thousand Years of Man's Unknown History)
1964: W. Raymond Drake (book, Gods or Spacemen?)
1965: Paul Misraki (book, Flying Saucers Through The Ages)
1966: Iosif Shklovsky and Carl Sagan (book, Intelligent Life in the Universe)
1967: Brad Steiger (book, The Flying Saucer Menace)
1967: John Michell (book, The Flying Saucer Vision)
1968: Erich von Däniken (book, Chariots of the Gods?)
1968: Barry Downing (book, The Bible and Flying Saucers)
1969: Robert Dione (book, God Drives a Flying Saucer)
1969: Jean Sendy (book, Those Gods Who Made Heaven and Earth; the novel of the Bible)
1971: Andrew Tomas (book, We are not the first: riddles of ancient science)
1972: Thomas Charles Lethbridge (book, The Legend of the Sons of God: A Fantasy?)
1974: Charles Berlitz (book, The Bermuda Triangle)
1974: Josef F. Blumrich (book, The Spaceships of Ezekiel)
1974: Claude Vorilhon aka Rael (book, Le Livre Qui Dit La Vérité (The Book Which Tells the Truth))
1974: Robin Collyns (book, Did Spacemen Colonise the Earth?)
1975: Graham Cairns-Smith (a biochemist who suggested that the ancestors of humans might have had alien biochemistries and presented some evidence to support this possibility in a biological research journal)[62][63]
1975: Serge Hutin (book, Alien Races and Fantastic Civilizations)
1976: Robert K. G. Temple (book, The Sirius Mystery)
1976: John Baxter, Thomas Atkins (book The Fire Came By: The Riddle of the Great Siberian Explosion)
1977: John Philip Cohane (book, Paradox: The Case for the Extraterrestrial Origin of Man)
1977: Warren Smith (book, UFO Trek)
1978: George Sassoon and Rodney Dale (book, Manna Machine)
1978: Zecharia Sitchin (book, The 12th planet)
1984: Don Elkins, James McCarthy, Carla Rueckert (book, The Ra Material: An Ancient Astronaut Speaks (The Law of One, No 1))
1988: Riley Martin (book, The Coming of Tan)
1993: David Icke (book, --and the truth shall set you free)
1996: Alan F. Alford (book, Gods of the New Millennium)
1996: Murry Hope (book, The Sirius Connection: Unlocking the Secrets of Ancient Egypt)
1996: Richard C. Hoagland (book, The Monuments of Mars: A City on the Edge of Forever)
1998: Lloyd Pye (book, Everything You Know is Wrong — Book One: Human Evolution)
1998: James Herbert Brennan (book, Martian Genesis)
1999: David Hatcher Childress (book, Technology of the Gods, The Incredible Science of the Ancients)
1999: Laurence Gardner (book, Genesis of the Grail Kings: The Explosive Story of Genetic Cloning)
2003: Burak Eldem
See also
Ancient Aliens (TV series)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Aliens
Ancient astronauts in popular culture
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_astronauts_in_popular_culture
Close encounter
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Close_encounter
Deluge myth
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deluge_myth
First contact (science fiction)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_contact_(science_fiction)
Gibborim
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibborim_(biblical)
Grey alien
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grey_alien
Little green men
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_green_men
Men in Black
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Men_in_Black
Pseudoarchaeology
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudoarchaeology
Pseudoscience topics (list)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_topics_characterized_as_pseudoscience
Reptilians
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reptilians
The Space Gods Revealed (book)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Space_Gods_Revealed
UFO conspiracy theory
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UFO_conspiracy_theory
Xenoarchaeology (archaeology on supposed alien cultures)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xenoarchaeology
Notes
1.^ Lieb, Michael (1998). Children of Ezekiel: Aliens, Ufos, the Crisis of Race, and the Advent of End Time. Duke University Press. p. 250. ISBN 0-8223-2268-4.
2.^ Cithara. St. Bonaventure University. 1961. p. 12.
3.^ Von Däniken, Erich (1984). Chariots of the Gods. Berkley Pub Group. ISBN 0-425-07481-1.
4.^ Harrold,. Noah's ark and ancient astronauts: Pseudoscientific beliefs about the past among a sample of college students. The Skeptical inquirer 11.1 1986: 61. Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal. 13 Dec 2010.
5.^ See section on Ancient Astronauts in The human myth: an introduction to anthropology by Michael D. Olien, Harper & Row, 1978
6.^ [1] Article on Ancient astronauts in Weekly World News Apr 3, 2001
7.^ Sagan, Carl. Broca's Brain. 1979
8.^ Joseph A. Angelo, Encyclopedia of space and astronomy, 2006 p. 444
9.^ Gold, T. "Cosmic Garbage," Air Force and Space Digest, 65 (May 1960).
10.^ "Ancient Aliens". History.com. 2011-06-14. http://www.history.com/shows/ancient-aliens. Retrieved 2011-06-18.
11.^ "Erich von Däniken's Chariots of the Gods: Science or Charlatanism?", Robert Sheaffer. First published in the "NICAP UFO Investigator", October/November, 1974. http://www.debunker.com/texts/vondanik.html
12.^ Sitchin's Nibiru Hypothesis
13.^ Sumerian Lexical Lists and Sitchin's "Translations"
14.^ Open Letter to Zecariah Sitchin
15.^ Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature (ETCSL) maintained by Oxford University
16.^ Temple, Robert K. G., The Sirius Mystery, 1976. ISBN 0-09-925744-0
17.^ Sagan, Carl, Broca's Brain, published by Random House, Inc. in 1974
18.^ Investigating the Sirius "Mystery" - Skeptical Inquirer (1978) Ian Ridpath
19.^ Walter E. A. van Beek: "Dogon Restudied: A Field Evaluation of the Work of Marcel Griaule." Current Anthropology, 32 (1991): 139-167.
20.^ Shklovski, I.S and Carl Sagan. Intelligent Life in the Universe. San Francisco: Holden-Day, 1966
21.^ "The Possible Consequences of Direct Contact," authored mostly by Sagan, according to line-by-line indications of individual or collaborative sections.
22.^ "civilizations, aeons more advanced than ours, must be plying the spaces between stars." Shklovski and Sagan, p. 464
23.^ Even allowing for millions of years between visits from a hypothetical "Galactic survey ship", Sagan calculated ~10ˆ4 such visits could have occurred "during [Earth's] geologic time". Shklovski and Sagan, p. 461;
24.^ Sagan cites the 1786 expedition of French explorer Jean-François de Galaup, comte de La Pérouse, which made the earliest contact between European and Tlingit cultures. This contact story was preserved as an oral tradition by the preliterate Tlingit, and was first recorded by anthropologist George T. Emmons over a century after its occurrence. Though framed in a Tlingit cultural and spiritual paradigm, the story remained an accurate telling of the 1786 encounter. According to Sagan, this proved how "under certain circumstances, a brief contact with an alien civilization will be recorded in a reconstructable manner. The reconstruction will be greatly aided if (1) the account is committed to written record soon after the event; (2) a major change is effected in the contacted society; and (3) no attempt is made by the contacting civilization to disguise its exogenous nature." Shklovski and Sagan, p. 453
25.^ "stories like the Oannes legend, and representations especially of the earliest civilizations on Earth, deserve much more critical studies than have been performed heretofore, with the possibility of direct contact with an extraterrestrial civilization as one of many possible alternative explanations". Shklovski and Sagan, p. 461
26.^ Sagan, Broca's Brain, p. 67
27.^ Partridge, C.H. (2003). UFO religions. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-26324-5. http://books.google.com/books?id=zHT8CeeiWlIC.
28.^ "http://www.sjsu.edu/faculty/watkins/cargocult.htm"
29.^ a b Sacred Texts: RÁMÁYAN OF VÁLMÍKI translated by Ralph T H Griffith
30.^ Erich von Däniken, Chariots of the Gods? ("Chapter 6: Ancient Imagination and Legends or Ancient Facts?"), 1968
31.^ "http://www.main.org/polycosmos/glxywest/vimanas.htm"
32.^ James Orr says "it is not easy to be certain of the interpretation of this strange passage." "Nephilim," The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, James Orr, ed., (Chicago: Howard-Severance, 1930), Vol. IV, p. 2133.
33.^ Book of Enoch (English and Swedish translations)
34.^ Ancient Aliens, Series 2 Episode 7: Angels and Aliens
35.^ Missler, Chuck, and Mark Eastman, Alien Encounters: The Secret Behind the UFO Phenomenon (Coeur d'Alene, ID: Koinonia House, 1997), 207.
36.^ von Däniken, 37. Le Poer Trench had previously speculated that a space vehicle had used nuclear weapons to destroy Sodom; Brinsley Le Poer Trench, The Sky People (New York: Award Books, 1970; copyright 1960, London) 64-5.
37.^ Gordon Stein, The encyclopedia of the paranormal, Prometheus Books, 1996 p. 29
38.^ Ezekiel 1, New International Version
39.^ von Daniken, 38-9. Morris K. Jessup, UFO and the Bible (New York: Citadel Press, 1956) 56-59.
40.^ Arthur W. Orton: "The Four-Faced Visitors of Ezekiel", Analog Science Fact & Fiction, March 1961, p. 99 (e-text at Project Gutenberg: http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/30252).
41.^ Josef F. Blumrich: The Spaceships of Ezekiel, Corgi Books, 1974.
42.^ "AncientDimensions Mysteries: De-Coded: The Ark Of The Covenant". Farshores.org. http://farshores.org/a06ark.htm. Retrieved 2011-06-18.
43.^ Profile of Paul Misraki in UFOs in the 1980s by Jerome Clark, Apogee Books, 1990
44.^ Philip H. Melling, Fundamentalism in America: millennialism, identity and militant religion, 1999, p. 183
45.^ The Bible and Flying Saucers First Edition 1968. Second edition published in 1997 ISBN 1-56924-745-5
46.^ "Hell is on the planet Venus" Weekly World News Aug 31, 1993. Books.google.com. 1993-08-31. http://books.google.com/books?id=QO0DAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA35&dq=venus+hell&hl=en&ei=38L0TZ6NKdG38gO--ZCaBw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=book-preview-link&resnum=3&ved=0CDUQuwUwAg#v=onepage&q=venus%20hell&f=false. Retrieved 2011-06-18.
47.^ Cave paintings and locations such as Wondinja and are discussed in the book UFO: the continuing enigma, Reader's Digest Association, 1991
48.^ UFO Evidence
49.^ "Art and UFO - Part 5". Sprezzatura.it. 2002-11-23. http://sprezzatura.it/Arte/Arte_UFO_5_eng.htm. Retrieved 2011-06-18.
50.^ "The Mysterious Nazca Lines". Onagocag.com. 1982-08-07. http://www.onagocag.com/nazca.html. Retrieved 2011-06-18.
51.^ "Strange Artifacts, Ancient Flying Machines". World Mysteries. 1903-12-17. http://www.world-mysteries.com/sar_7.htm. Retrieved 2011-06-18.
52.^ Christopher Penczak, Ascension Magick: Ritual, Myth & Healing for the New Aeon, 2007, p. 226
53.^ "NOVA
Transcripts
Secrets of Lost Empires
Stonehenge". PBS. 1997-02-11. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/transcripts/2403stone.html. Retrieved 2011-06-18.
54.^ "NOVA Online
Mysteries of the Nile
August 27, 1999: The Third Attempt". Pbs.org. 1999-08-27. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/egypt/dispatches/990827.html. Retrieved 2011-06-18.
55.^ History Channel "Mega Movers: Ancient Mystery Moves"
56.^ a b c Kevin Burns (executive producer) (2011). Ancient Aliens, Series 3, Episode 8: Aliens and Lost Worlds (motion picture). A+E Networks.
57.^ David Hatcher Childress, Renato Vesco. Man-Made UFOs. 2007. p.179
58.^ "Ancient Astronauts". Eridu.co.uk. http://www.eridu.co.uk/Author/human_origins/ancient_astronauts.html. Retrieved 2011-06-18.
59.^ Clifford Wilson, Crash Go the Chariots, Lancer Books, 1972
60.^ "Charioteer of the Gods". Jcolavito.tripod.com. 2001-03-10. http://jcolavito.tripod.com/lostcivilizations/id26.html. Retrieved 2011-06-18.
61.^ "Lhote, Henri (1903-1991)". Daviddarling.info. 2007-02-01. http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/L/Lhote.html. Retrieved 2011-06-18.
62.^ A case for an alien ancestry, A. G. Cairns-Smith, Proceedings of the Royal Society B, 189, 249-74, 1975
63.^ "A Case for an Alien Ancestry". Adsabs.harvard.edu. http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1975RSPSB.189..249C. Retrieved 2011-06-18.
References
Charroux, Robert (1974). Masters of the world. Berkley Pub. Corp. ASIN B0006WIE1O.
Colavito, Jason (2005). The Cult of Alien Gods: H. P. Lovecraft and Extraterrestrial Pop Culture. Prometheus Books. ISBN 1-59102-352-1.
Däniken, Erich von (1972). Chariots of the Gods. Berkley Publishing Group. ISBN 0-425-16680-5.
Grünschloß, Andreas (June 2006). ""Ancient Astronaut" Narrations: A Popular Discourse on Our Religious Past" (PDF). Marburg Journal of Religion 11 (1). ISSN 1612-2941. http://web.uni-marburg.de/religionswissenschaft/journal/mjr/pdf/2006/gruenschloss2006.pdf.
Raël (1974). The Message Given by Extra-terrestrials. Nova Dist. ISBN 2-940252-20-3.
Sitchin, Zecharia (1999). The 12th Planet (The Earth Chronicles, Book 1). Avon. ISBN 0-380-39362-X.
Further reading
Avalos, Hector (2002) "The Ancient Near East in Modern Science Fiction: Zechariah Sitchin's The 12th Planet as Case Study." Journal of Higher Criticism, vol. 9, no. 1, pp. 49–70.
Harris, Christie (1975) Sky Man on the Totem Pole? New York: Atheneum.
External links
'Fringe' or 'cult' archaeology examined by professional archaeologist Keith Fitzpatrick-Matthews
http://www.badarchaeology.com/
Internet Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_astronauts
Ancient Aliens Pilot & Season One From YouTube:
( http://www.history.com/shows/ancient-aliens )
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