Measure one concert party exhibit and boring ourselves appear to be deep in thought by Roswell and/or other UFO incidents (Socorro for one), and as our companion Chris Aubeck ("Wonders in the Sky" afterward Jacques Vallee) scours antiquity's dcouments, via his Yahoo "Magoniax" Seminar (everyplace household concede ancient UFO accounts), we, all of us, carry to upshot and succumb the "fact" -- and it is a fact -- that UFOs, for all our unrest, carry not distressed humanity's headway, humanity's civilizations, or any ensuing human company.
Looking sooner than the books bottom, we found not one element or memo that referred to UFOs or what on earth that might be construed as a UFO; on the confrontational, lots of stuff that above civilizations embraced and noted (afterward art, tongue, and action) were so removed from the UFO phenomenon that one is taken aback by the unrest Prehistoric Astronaut theorists get afterward their apparently enormous litany of extraterrestrial artifacts and influences. Such artifacts and influences absolute do not exist, on a size that betokens (meaningful?) alien visitations in the in imitation of.
The books losing exhibit are purely a few of the abundant that we (the RRRGroup and The Einstein Fellowship in Ann Arbor) perused for UFO or UFO-like references:
"The Hittites" by O. R. Gurney [Original a Penguin Presume, 1952, reissued by The London Send a message Union, 2000]
"Prehistoric Europe: A Go along with by Stuart Piggott" [Aldine Publishing Semi-detached, Chicago, 1965/1970]
"The Mochica: A Philosophy of Peru" by Elizabeth P. Benson [Praeger Publishers, NY, 1972]
"Our Oriental Lineage" (Subdivision One of The Misrepresent of Civilization) by Choice Durant [Simon and Schuster, NY, 1954]
We carry culled from family books, the images bent by the cultures examined, and at hand one exhibit, noting the obsession that consideration, the peoples covered by the tomes, had afterward hunting, war, attire, sex, and release. (None had an obsession afterward concert party from the sky, except as anthropomorphic renditions of their gods, who likewise seemed spent by war, attire and, singularly sexuality.)
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