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  1. #1
    us
    Jun 2009
    Central Pennsylvania
    1,371

    A Bit on the Blonde "Indians" of Yore

    Edo Nyland’s decipherment of the Horsecreek Petroglyph (See Horsecreek) in a West Virginia canyon using Basque showed it to be an eye witness account of a bison hunt, the animals being driven over a cliff. Nyland noted that the very large Ogam inscription in that canyon is written in a type of Ogam different from Irish, one that has never been used in Ireland. He suspected it to be Libyan Ogam (personal communication). The Libyans and Northern Egyptians at that time were blond and blue eyed.. Edo Nyland suspects that the Four Khalifs who conquered Egypt and Libya around 500 AD drove the blond people from their homeland. They made it clear that they would not tolerate any Nonbeliever religions. The blond people had excellent boats and they all sailed first to Ireland, from where the more adventurous ones went to North America, where they eventually joined the native life style. The 17th Century English settlers in the United States wrote home telling about native tribes with blond hair (Robert L. Pyle, All That Remains, pp 66) They were subsequently absorbed in the new population.

    http://www.faculty.ucr.edu/~legneref...e/fellview.htm

  2. #2
    Charter Member
    us
    da book worm--researcher

    Feb 2007
    callahan,fl
    delta 4000 / ace 250 - used BH and many others too
    13,086
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    Re: A Bit on the Blonde "Indians" of Yore

    according to some bits of info I've seen --celtic (blond haired / blue eyed) type colonist have long been suspected of coming to america --long before columbus ever come into the area.--- in his original log of his trip --it was noted that the "locals" told him that "others" had been there before him long before -- and that the locals had traded with them -- columbus wanted badly to figger out who traded with the"locals" -- by trading he got a spear point that was made by the "others"--which was taken back to spain --recently the spear point has been clearfully checked by metal experts who thru checking the ore's property's linked its manufactor to north africa * -- however since this would "flip" known history on its collective head --this information has recieved little press.

  3. #3
    us
    Jan 2009
    »»--------->
    3,203

    Re: A Bit on the Blonde "Indians" of Yore

    These Ogam hieroglyphs and petroglyphs are located in more than a couple locations throughout WV. They're pictured in a book called " Mountain Mysteries and Ancient History " which is actually a terrific guide to the native american history and other mysterious cultures in West Virginia. The state has many unexplained discoveries I find interesting like Armstrong Mountain with a Stonehenge like structure, Mt. Carbon, 11 foot skeletons with red hair, 4d artifacts found in million year old coal seams, and these Ogam petroglyphs that nobody can identify, fascinating stuff.




    http://cwva.org/ogam_rebutal/wirtz.html

    http://www.wvculture.org/HiStory/nat...rywalls02.html
    " Stay frosty, gents "

  4. #4
    Charter Member
    us
    Oct 2007
    Freezco, Coldorado
    White's DFX, White's Classic 1 Coinmaster
    4,369
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    Re: A Bit on the Blonde "Indians" of Yore

    Great info in these posts. I'm from Oklahoma and followed Gloria Farley's work since the sixties.
    This world is not my home.

  5. #5
    us
    Jun 2009
    Weston, FL
    818
    5 times

    Re: A Bit on the Blonde "Indians" of Yore

    I've had the comic pleasure of reading some of Edo's work, I really think he makes it up as he goes along. It's kind of like reading Harry Potter and thinking that's an accurate representation of English history.

    Let's say that there were blond haired natives running around when the Pilgrams arrived in what today is the US, why would he ignore the obvious candidates for who they were? The Vikings settled in Canada (L'ans aux Meadows in Newfoundland), they had great boats, they came from the blondest area in the world, they actually used an Ogam type script, weren't afraid of settling new areas, etc. Nope, Edo's got to try and connect the holy land and the lost tribes of israel to the new world.

    Let's tackle a couple of inventions of truth:

    Bison jumps don't exist in West Virginia.

    Edo doesn't speak Basque (or any other language from what I've heard), yet he can take some scratches and create a complex message from it. I heard he was asked to provide a basque language translation for his script, but couldn't.

    Egypt was under the Byzantine empire in 500ad. It didn't fall to the arabs until 641ad or so.

    Egypt and Lybia never had populations of native blonds. It is a hot desert now, it was a hot desert then, and skin cancer does a very effective job of dropping those traits from the gene pool. The Romans might have put some Gauls there, the Goths and Visigoths certain got to some areas, the later Ottomans moved some Slavic Muslims around, but Egypt and Lybia never had a native blond population.

    The basque weren't driven from their homelands by the arabs. In fact, they were granted nobility status precisely because they were the only people on the Iberian peninsula not conquered by the moors by 711ad. Basques by and large have pale skin and brown or black hair.



    Quote Originally Posted by uniface
    Edo Nyland’s decipherment of the Horsecreek Petroglyph (See Horsecreek) in a West Virginia canyon using Basque showed it to be an eye witness account of a bison hunt, the animals being driven over a cliff. Nyland noted that the very large Ogam inscription in that canyon is written in a type of Ogam different from Irish, one that has never been used in Ireland. He suspected it to be Libyan Ogam (personal communication). The Libyans and Northern Egyptians at that time were blond and blue eyed.. Edo Nyland suspects that the Four Khalifs who conquered Egypt and Libya around 500 AD drove the blond people from their homeland. They made it clear that they would not tolerate any Nonbeliever religions. The blond people had excellent boats and they all sailed first to Ireland, from where the more adventurous ones went to North America, where they eventually joined the native life style. The 17th Century English settlers in the United States wrote home telling about native tribes with blond hair (Robert L. Pyle, All That Remains, pp 66) They were subsequently absorbed in the new population.

    http://www.faculty.ucr.edu/~legneref...e/fellview.htm

  6. #6
    us
    Jun 2009
    Central Pennsylvania
    1,371

    Re: A Bit on the Blonde "Indians" of Yore

    Quote Originally Posted by JoshiaReam
    Egypt and Lybia never had populations of native blonds.
    Not that this is a make-it-or-break-it detail, but the whole Mediterranean was colonised by Greeks. Way back. And the climate then was a lot cooler than it is now. The drapery depicted on Greek statues was woolen.

 

 

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