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That I don't really know if it can relate to the same.
originally posted by: trollz
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: trollz
That text does not actually exist where it is said to exist. Childress lied.
Regardless, the depictions of the Vimanas and other such evidence do still exist.
originally posted by: StallionDuck
Trollz,
which evidence?
originally posted by: solve
the dolmens of Russia
originally posted by: andy06shake
a reply to: ElGoobero
The question i suppose pertaining to whether or not there was a civilization on earth before Humans lies with whether or not dinosaurs manage to evolve into anything sentient, in the same manner, us clever Monkeys claim to be, before whatever ELE managed to wipe them out.
If so where did they go, and where are all their fossils i suppose?
originally posted by: Blue Shift
Well, this planet does have the nasty tendency to occasionally completely refresh itself over time with asteroids, volcanoes, earthquakes and so on. I guess it depends on how somebody wants to define "advanced" or "industrial."
And of course, there's also the chance that the Lizard People gave everything a good scrubbing before they left or destroyed themselves or whatever they did.
originally posted by: StallionDuck
a reply to: trollz
everything appears to mention the same destruction as a meteor, right down to the mention of iron.
However... Once it gets to this:
The hair and nails fell out. Pottery broke without apparent cause and the birds turned white. After a few hours all foodstuffs were infected… …to escape from this fire, the soldiers threw themselves in streams to wash themselves and their equipment.
That I don't really know if it can relate to the same. Is it possible that a meteor strike could cause these effects as well?
originally posted by: solve
a reply to: trollz
Vimanas are such a weird subject...
And just a picture of the dolmens of Russia makes me trip balls. So many lost things.
The word dolmen translates as portal tomb.
1859, from French dolmin applied 1796 by French general and antiquarian Théophile Malo Corret de La Tour d'Auvergne (1743-1800), perhaps from Cornish tolmen "enormous stone slab set up on supporting points," such that a man may walk under it, literally "hole of stone," from Celtic men "stone."
originally posted by: solve
a reply to: trollz
Vimanas are such a weird subject...
And just a picture of the dolmens of Russia makes me trip balls. So many lost things.
The word dolmen translates as portal tomb.. the first part is true, not sure about the tomb part... maybe baby.
...Why cant this boring piece of what not, be the cyclopean playground it was supposed to be..