SATURDAY SESSIONS: BREAKING NEWS! (A.S. Please excuse the format below as news was disseminated in a hurry!)
On 14th February, 2017, a farmer was digging turf in a local bog here in County Wicklow when he unearthed what is arguably the most dramatic discovery in the history of archaeology. In my own humble opinion, it is also the most significant discovery in the history of modern science.
Yes, Dear Reader, it is that significant! And in happened here in Ireland less than two months ago!
So what is it? And why doesn't the world know all about it?
The artefact they found in the bog resembles an ankh (see picture), an ancient Egyptian cross with a handle on it. Egyptologists believe that the ankh was a symbol of life. It appears regularly in the ancient hieroglyphic texts. But where did the ankh come from and what was it for?
Jeremiah Ó Mhaoldomhnaigh, a curator at the National Archaeological Museum in Dublin, is an old school-friend of mine. He was the one who told me about this amazing find, which has not yet been revealed to the mainstream media. The artefact was sent to London and Berlin and from there to ESTEC in the Netherlands for further examination and verification.
Jonathan McCarthy, an old
school-friend of Jeremiah's, works at ESTEC, the European Space and Technology
Centre. Jonathan specialises in acoustics
and electromagnetic vibration. Although the news of the find has not been
officially confirmed, the mind-boggling story reveals that the ankh was, in fact, of extra-terrestrial
origin. Furthermore, the specialists at ESTEC were able to establish that the ankh was used to build megalithic structures such as Newgrange
here in Ireland, dated at 3200 BCE - albeit believed by Jeremiah and many
archaeologists to be much older than that. It is assumed that ankh technology was also deployed in the construction of the
Pyramids (dated at c. 2600 BCE) and
Stonehenge (c.2200BCE).
So what exactly is ankh technology? ESTEC have extrapolated the following conclusions subsequent to their extensive examination of the ankh and its application. I quote directly from a recording of my conversation with Jeremiah ,which he kindly permitted me to publish in this blog:
So what exactly is ankh technology? ESTEC have extrapolated the following conclusions subsequent to their extensive examination of the ankh and its application. I quote directly from a recording of my conversation with Jeremiah ,which he kindly permitted me to publish in this blog:
"Jeremiah, I'm almost speechless
at the very thought of this amazing discovery. Can you tell us again what the
ankh was used for?"
"Well, Greg, we believe
it was used in the early days to generate the application of sound technology
in the construction of monuments like Newgrange
in the Boyne Valley which comprises about two hundred thousand tonnes of stone.
A similar technology would have been used six hundred years later to build the
great Pyramid at Giza, which has an estimated mass of almost six million tonnes." "But how did they do it?
How did it work?'"
"They simply matched frequencies, causing the stones to levitate
when the properly-tuned vibration was sounded by the ankh. "
"Can you describe the procedure
involved in the actual construction of these buildings?" "As far as we can
tell, when a monolith is set to resound, its vibrations keep it in the air. A
man sits on the monolith for as long as is required. He is, so to speak, the 'driver'.
A light touch by him will move the massive stone in any direction." "So,what
can we learn from this? Can we use this
ancient technology today? " "Our
construction industry today is primitive and ecologically unfriendly in
comparison to what they were able to do and achieve in the past. In ancient
times, people worked with nature, not against it. It appears that as crystallised
blocks of basalt resonate at the frequency of gravity, the - " "What is that, Jeremiah? What do
you mean by the frequency of gravity?" "The frequency of gravity is
the frequency between short radio waves and infrared radiation. The effect is
that the blocks simply lose their weight. Building a Pyramid for these people
was like playing Lego."
Lego!
Well, you were the first to hear this amazing news today,thanks to
my old school-friend
at the museum in Kildare Street and his old school-friend
at ESTEC in Noordwijk. Let me conclude by saying that it is my
honour and
great privilege this morning to be the first to share
this extraordinary discovery
with with
you, my esteemed readers of SATURDAY
SESSIONS!
Please
watch this space for further updates!
Wicklow bog ankh
Is ait an mac an saol.
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