What this item
clearly confirms above and beyond questionable doubt is that actual script was
easily in use in a clearly rural setting well before the apparent establishment
of the Atlantean global civilization which I am satisfied spanned at least
3000BC through 11259BC. It is obvious
that clear record keeping is necessary for far flung trading enterprise. Now we are given hard dated evidence that
nicely preceded the Atlantean time line.
It also confirms
that we can look to see the Atlantean local timeline in its natural places of origin
and early propagation to extend much further back through time, although I am hesitant
to yet link it directly to the founding colonies which had the luxury of been
sustained for at least 4000 years after a foundation around 10,000BP or through
4000 BC.
My core point is
that it is now highly probable that actual cultural continuity existed between
the original founding of colonies and the global establishment of the Atlantean
dispensation. Thus the actual translation
of parts of Genesis was a first off attempt to tackle in the local vernacular from
real source documents. My missing link
was a lack of scriptural continuity to carry the information. This solves that problem completely. It was very much extant but on perishibles.
The Dispilio
Tablet - the oldest known written text
11 OCTOBER, 2013 - 04:42 JOHNBLACK
According to conventional archaeology, writing
wasn’t invented until 3000 to 4000 BC in Sumeria.
However, an artefact was found over a decade ago which contradicts this
belief – and perhaps this is the reason why few people know about the
discovery.
The Dispilio tablet was discovered by a professor of
prehistoric archaeology, George Xourmouziadis, in 1993 in a Neolithic lake settlement
in Northern Greece near the city of Kastoria. A group of people used to occupy
the settlement 7,000 to 8,000 years ago. The Dispilio tablet was one of many
artefacts that were found in the area, however the importance of the table lies
in the fact that it has an unknown written text on it that goes back further
than 5,000 BC. The wooden tablet was dated using the C12 method to have
been made in 5260 BC, making it significantly older than the writing system
used by the Sumerians.
The text on the tablet includes a type of engraved
writing which probably consists of a form of writing that pre-existed Linear B writing
used by the Mycenaean Greeks. As well as the tablet, many other ceramic pieces
were found that also have the same type of writing on them. Professor
Xourmouziadis has suggested that this type of writing, which has not yet been
deciphered, could be any form of communication including symbols representing
the counting of possessions.
More artefacts were discovered that show the
economic and agricultural activities of the settlement, proof of animal
breeding and their diet preferences as well as tools and pottery, figurines
and other personal ornaments.
Decoding the writing is going to be difficult if not
impossible, unless a new Rosetta stone is
found. Unfortunately, by the moment the tablet was removed out of its original
environment, contact with oxygen started the deterioration process and it is
now under preservation. It is impressive to think that the wooden tablet had
remained at the bottom of the lake for 7,500 years.
While this artefact predates the Sumerian writing
system, I am sure in the future more will be found in other areas of the world
that will go even further back in time, until the true history of humanity will
be unravelled and completely change what we know about our history.
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