First recall that the Atlantean copper fleet sailed every year from Bimini to the isle of Lewis and did this from at least 2500 BC through 1159 BC. That was a period of at least 1250 years. During that same period deer husbandry arose in Georgia, Ireland and surely Scotland.. Now you know what you are looking at in this item. This just happens to be an increasingly secure snippet of the global Atlantean Bronze Age.
This is very good news actually. It establishes significant Atlantic seamanship beginning around 3100 BC which is seven hundred years before the apex of the European Bronze Age and the building of the Great Pyramid in 2400 BC.
Such seamanship was making use of large open vessels rigged much the same way as a viking ship. Shipping took place during the summer months and involved catching the Gulf Stream out from the shores of Georgia and then running before the wind until the latitude of Ireland was reached. Most times is is a short fast trip in great weather.
Deep sea Shipping had to precede the full scale copper trade that allowed the Great pyramid to be built.
This happens to fulfill another natural prediction
More Evidence that Native Americans Discovered Europe Around 3000 BC!
Yeehaw! We’uns are high falutin Red Deer !
On
April 6, 2016 BBC Science Reporter, Jonathon Webb, announced to the
world that the famous Red Deer of Scotland were not from Scotland. In
fact, they were not from anywhere near Scotland . . . not even Norway.
They were not genetically related to any of the Red Deer of Europe. The
only way that they could have arrived in Scotland was by boat around
the year 3,000 BC. You can read the article here: Scottish Red Deer
Webb summed up the article by writing, “We
think that the most likely source is from an unsampled population
somewhere – we could be looking at somewhere like mainland Europe,” the paper’s lead author, Dr David Stanton from Cardiff University, told the BBC News website. A
reference was made to Belgian voles, who arrived by boat to the Orkney
Islands via boat around 3,100 BC, according to an earlier study in 2013.
Most Brits probably read the article and were impressed by the skill of the geneticists. By breakfast time the next morning, they had forgotten the article and moved on to more important things, like the big football (soccer) game coming up between Wales and England.
Having
ten years of skepticism toward such announcements behind me, I
instantly thought that the assumptions didn’t make sense. The
academician stated that the DNA of the Scottish Red Deer didn’t match
any known Red Deer in Europe or Asia, then he said that they probably
came from the heart of Europe . . . but by boat. I read the “Orkney
Vole” article. Most Americans call voles, field mice. The Orkney vole
only lives in the Orkney Islands. There are no voles elsewhere in the
British Isles, whereas the Scottish Red Deer lives in other locations in
Scotland and Ireland.
Actually,
the researchers did not get a match between any voles in Europe and the
Orkney voles, but Belgian coastal voles were the closest. They DID NOT
CHECK for genetic similarities to voles in the Canary Islands, Azores
Islands, Canada and the eastern US. The date of 3,100 BC was based on
an estimate of how long it would take Belgian moles to mutate to
something different. That is NO proof that Belgian voles rode in boats
to the Orkneys.
Red Deer Research
Scottish Red Deer (Cervus elaphus scoticus)
are indigenous to the northern islands of Scotland, northwestern
Scotland and the counties on the Atlantic Coast of southwestern
Ireland. Most references list them as being from Mainland Europe,
because the articles have not been changed to be concurrent with new DNA
studies. One finds these deer in the exact same Irish counties, where
dark hair and more skin pigments are predominant. See the map on the
left. What would be the connection between non-Gaelic physical features
and Cervus elaphus scoticus?
If
Red Deer were being boated from the mainland of Europe (such as
Belgium) those are the least likely locations that you would expect to
see them. They would be in eastern Scotland and not at all in Ireland.
Clearly the facts are not jiving with the speculations made by the DNA
scientists.
Scottish Red
Deer are most abundant in County Kerry, Ireland on the southwest tip of
Ireland, not the Orkney Islands. County Kerry . . . that’s the Irish
county that has many petroglyphs identical to those in North Georgia?
It was time to draw some lines between the points.
3,000 BC
. . . the date when the geneticists think that Red Deer were boated to
the Orney Islands is the exact time period when University of Alberta
archaeologist, Gordon Freeman, thinks that indigenous peoples introduced
stonehenges to the British Isles, including the Orkney Islands. You
can read more about that in a recent POOF article on possible Phoenician
voyages to North America around 2,200 BC. See: Is this a Phoenician temple?
Shezam
. . . the American Elk is the largest member of the red deer family.
For unknown reasons, early British settlers chose not to call them Red
Deer, but called them elk . . . which is the European name for a moose.
American Elk and European Red Deer have no problem breeding and produce
offspring that are fertile.
The
biggest difference between the two animals, other than size, is the
shape of the antlers and the number of points. American elk antlers
typically have 14 points and rarely more than 18. European and
Mediterranean Elks can have anywhere from 24 to 66 points on their
antlers. The European antlers are also broader at the mid-section, even
though overall they weigh less.
Photos
of Scottish Red Deer and American Elk were compared with several
species of Red Deer in Mainland Europe. As you can see below, there are
some noticeable differences in the antlers. Both the American Elk and
Scottish Red Deer typically had 14 points on their antlers. The Red
Deer in Denmark, which is directly across the North Sea from Scotland,
has 24 points and a much thicker neck. The Red Deer in Greece also has
24 points on his antler. Notice that the antlers of European and
Eurasian Red Deer typically curve inward. The antlers of the American
Elk and Orkney Red Deer turn upward. The American Elk and Scottish Red Deer are very close in appearance.
A
European Red Deer Stag can weigh up to 440 pounds (190 kg). The
extinct Eastern American Elk stag that lived from Quebec to Georgia
could weigh up to a 1000 pounds (455 kg). How could such large animals
be carried in the primitive boats of the Neolithic Period? That is a
very pertinent question. Whether one is crossing the Atlantic Ocean or
the North Sea, one can expect extremely cold, rough, stormy waters.
Such waters would be impossible for a dugout canoe or even a small
sailboat today.
Dr. Gordon
Freeman from Alberta thinks that humans may have taken dog or caribou
sleds along the edge of the Arctic Ice Shelf in order to reach Europe.
He speculates that they took along light weight igloos for use in
fishing along the way. Several articles mentioned that Bronze Age
Europeans domesticated some types of Red Deer. Perhaps Red Deer pulled
their sleds instead of caribou.
[nonsense - arclein ]
The
BBC article did not mention the indigenous Red Deer of western Ireland,
because evidently the Scottish and American geneticists did not study
them. However, the spokesman did say that they compared the Orkney Red
Deer to ALL known Red Deer. Maybe they did. Maybe they didn’t. For
several decades, geneticists insisted that the Sammi (Lapps) didn’t have
any Asiatic genes. It turned out that all of the universities in the
world were using genetic samples of a branch of the Lapps, who lived in
Swedish towns and had been intermarrying with the Swedes for 2,500
years. Full-blooded Lapps in remote areas of Norway, Sweden, Finland
and Russian turned out to have just as high a percentage of Asiatic DNA
as most Native Americans in the US and Canada.
Official
Irish government references state that their Red Deer have been in
Ireland as long as 10,000 years and that they are genetically different
than European Red Deer. The Irish Channel between Ulster and Scotland
is only 12 miles wide. Crossing the Irish Channel would have been a
much simpler task than the North Sea or Atlantic Ocean. It is only
seven miles from the closest island in the Orkney archipelago and the
Scottish Mainland. In either case, rafts could have been built to
transport livestock or Red Deer.
Whether
Scotland’s Red Deer came from North America or southwestern Ireland,
one fact remains that cannot be fully explained. The same petroglyphic
symbols were carved into the rocks in the Orkney Islands, Southwestern
Ireland, Ven Island, Sweden and the North Georgia Mountains. How can
that be?
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