somehiker
Silver Member
- May 1, 2007
- 4,365
- 6,431
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
Volcano/caverns or squid?
Looking back at this post.....my display doesn't show your attachment.
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Volcano/caverns or squid?
Looking back at this post.....my display doesn't show your attachment.
Huh - looks perfect on my screen, but I'll post it again. I've experienced some weirdness posting photos lately. Here goes:
Other maybes like these symbols of power/authority, which are also common to ancient imagery
....from the "Historia Tolteca Chichimeca" illustration posted previously in this thread.
Yes, presumably there have been many uses and motivations for rock communications. After all, it is a "permanent" messaging technique: trail markers, spring locations, hunting mojo, story telling, marks of possession, significant events, et al. Of course, for the hopeful, treasure maps too. The work of Los Alamos Lab plasma physicist Anthony Peratt on this is subject is arguably a testament to a worldwide observation and documentation of perhaps a cataclysmic electromagnetic event seen in the skies in the distant past.I've done a metric ton of research on petros, and visited sites from the shores of Lake Superior, where there are even some panels which are only viewable up close from a canoe or deck of a small boat, over to Wyoming and Oregon and down to Utah and Arizona. Although the majority are pecked, especially where the rock is black basalt or coated in black natural substances, some have been painted using thick pigments of single or multiple colors in contrast to their rock "canvas". Others, especially those in sandstone areas, are carved into the surface. Different strokes for different folks I guess.
It's remarkable how so many, despite the great distances between them, are so similar..... easily recognized as animals the artists observed or hunted in corresponding locals or images of the hunters themselves. Others are not so easy and it's sometimes hotly debated as to what they actually represent.....stars and planets, astronomical alignments and events, spiritual beings or even aliens. Personally, I think many are simply drawings created by children and others may even be ancient "Kilroy Was Here" type doodles left behind by nomads or migrants during their travels.
Yes, presumably there have been many uses and motivations for rock communications. After all, it is a "permanent" messaging technique: trail markers, spring locations, hunting mojo, story telling, marks of possession, significant events, et al. Of course, for the hopeful, treasure maps too. The work of Los Alamos Lab plasma physicist Anthony Peratt on this is subject is arguably a testament to a worldwide observation and documentation of perhaps a cataclysmic electromagnetic event seen in the skies in the distant past.