02-23-2010, 03:23 PM
He's been mentioned a couple of times in this thread already, so mine will be the third. Graham Hancock presents the most well researched and comprehensively detailed study of evidence (scattered across the globe like puzzle pieces) that points to a pre-historical, advanced civilization.
His greatest work "Fingerprints of the Gods" was the tome responsible for cracking my eyes open to a new and wondrous world. For anyone interested in the unorthodox history of this planet, i would highly recommend.
There is also a fascinating correlation between what Ra had to say about the "lost cities" of South America and the work of a German journalist in a book published in 1974. I encountered this information in the Bring4th blog of Lynn Rice at http://www.bring4th.org/members.php?uid=272. Of Lynn's two blog entries, it is the older one titled "Ra and the Ugha Mongulala". (If you click on the link to her blog, scroll down to see the entry.) I think you will enjoy it!
The first paragraph reads:
: ) GLB
His greatest work "Fingerprints of the Gods" was the tome responsible for cracking my eyes open to a new and wondrous world. For anyone interested in the unorthodox history of this planet, i would highly recommend.
There is also a fascinating correlation between what Ra had to say about the "lost cities" of South America and the work of a German journalist in a book published in 1974. I encountered this information in the Bring4th blog of Lynn Rice at http://www.bring4th.org/members.php?uid=272. Of Lynn's two blog entries, it is the older one titled "Ra and the Ugha Mongulala". (If you click on the link to her blog, scroll down to see the entry.) I think you will enjoy it!
The first paragraph reads:
Quote:As a hobby, I enjoy reading about ancient megalitic ruins in the Americas and the mythology that surrounds them. Remembering what Ra had to say about the others of their density that worked with the people of South America, I decided to see if there was anything in the mythology of that area of the Amazon in my copy of David Hatcher Childress' "Lost Cities and Ancient Mysteries of South America". Needless to say, I was extremely excited to read that a very similar story had been told in a book called "The Chronicle of Akakor" written by German journalist Karl Brugger in 1976. It tells of the history of a tribe called the Ugha Mongulala as it was dictated by Tatunca Nara who professed to be the chief of the tribe.
: ) GLB
Explanation by the tongue makes most things clear, but love unexplained is clearer. - Rumi