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The Missing Lands

Page 32

by Freddy Silva


  PEAR took the concept to the next stage. Conducting a group of people focussed on the same aim, their combined intent was shown to influence the output of a computer to the point where it became possible to alter a regular electronic drumbeat.35

  If people united by a single thought can do this to a machine, how about their environment? In 1998, 15% of the Brazilian state of Roraima succumbed to an out-of-control fire. Over 1500 firefighters from three countries joined in to quell the flames, all to no avail. 13,200 square miles of land were torched. Then, experts in weather modification were flown in: two Caipo Indian shamans. Two days after a ritual dance, the heavens opened, rain poured in abundance and 90% of the fire was extinguished.36

  Since the 1960s, over 500 studies conducted by the Maharishi Effect of Transcendental Meditation have been shown to reduce conflict and suffering. The most notable were performed using directed group focus targeting American cities during times of high crime. One study of twenty-four cities showed that whenever 1% of the population was engaged in transcendental meditation, the crime rate dropped 24%. In a follow-up study of forty-eight cities, half of those with the requisite 1% of meditators experienced a 22% decrease in crime and an 89% decrease in the crime trend. In the other half of cities without the threshold percentage of meditators, crime increased by 2% and the crime trend by 53%.37

  Maharishi Manesh Yogi, who introduced the Trancendental Meditation technique

  If just one percent of the population of a city is capable of influencing its environment, by extension it would take just over 8000 people to affect the entire world — or less if the level of focussed intent is intense, as proved by the PEAR experiments and the Tibetan monks.38 Since we are now aware that the universe is not a series of isolated events but an interrelated mechanism-organism, and our thoughts and intent are capable of influencing the world around us, surely it would be possible to influence the potential course of, say, an earthbound meteor?

  Suppose one day the world wakes up to news of a space agency declaring, with absolute certainty, civilization as we know it is about to end due to an unavoidable collision with a large space rock — the kind of story already rolling out with ever greater frequency yet picked up only by an audience with an interest in such matters. On rare occasions, when such objects pass between the Moon and Earth, the press release makes international headlines. But what if one day that bulletin offered even odds of annihilation? As history, and now experiments in consciousness show, it often takes an incident of global proportion to galvanize the world into action. At first glance our present situation may look fractured beyond repair, but given such a scenario I wonder if the validation of the supernatural power latent in the human temple, welded to a sign of mutually assured destruction, is enough to generate a bulwark of energy capable, in all likelihood, of affecting and altering the outcome of an incoming cosmic monster, and in the process unite this dysfunctional human brotherhood?

  Probably.

  Besides selectees in laboratories and monks, we know there exist others who already understand how the universe works and how it can be tailored by the magical power of concentrated will. We called such individuals by many names but they all belonged to the same guild. One of them was the Lord of Anu, who once confided in Enoch, "the things which you see at rest and in motion were completed by me. I will tell you now… what things I created from the non-existent, and what visible things from the invisible."39 That’s quite the power.

  Perhaps what the antediluvian gods might have wanted with us all along was for us to discover the very same power within ourselves, to develop the gumption to alter the course of our own destiny and thus discover, in the end, that we too are gods.

  NOTES

  CHAPTER 1

  1. Betts, M. Ancient Language may Prove Key to Translation System, Computerworld, vol. IX, no. 8, 25 Feb, 1985, p.30; and Sunday Times, London, November 4, 1984

  2. Edgar Mejita, personal communication

  3. Waters, Frank, Book of the Hopi, Ballantine, New York, 1972, p.16

  4. Song of the Waitaha: The Histories of a Nation, Being the teachings of six Waitaha elders as told to author Barry Brailsford, Wharariki Publishing Ltd, 2003

  5. Wong, Kate. Ancient Fossils from Morocco Mess Up Modern Human Origins, Scientific American, June 8, 2017

  6. Shreeve, James, The Neanderthal Enigma, William Morrow & Co, 1995

  7. Ruhlen, M. Linguistic Evidence for Human Prehistory, Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 5/2, 1995, p.265-8

  8. “Stone Bracelet is Oldest Ever Found in the World,” Siberian Times, May 12, 2015; “Could this stunning bracelet be 65,000 to 70,000 years old?” 2 August 2017

  9. Rudgley, R. Lost Civilizations of the Stone Age, Century, 1998

  10. Marshack, Alexander. The Roots of Civilization, McGraw Hill, 1972

  11. P. Spurny, J. Borovicka1, H. Mucke, and J. Svoren. Discovery of a new branch of the Taurid meteoroid stream as a real source of potentially hazardous bodies, Astronomy & Astrophysics, May 20 2017

  12. Hughes, D. Focus: Visitors From Space, Astronomy Now, Nov. 1997

  13. Wou-Foung in G. Schlegel, Uranographie Chinoise, 1875, p.740

  CHAPTER 2

  1. Plato, Timaeus, trans Bury, 1929, 22 C-D

  2. Dorsey, G.A. The Mythology of the Wichita, Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1904, p.291-5

  3. Bellamy, Hans Schindler. Moons, Myths and Man, Faber and Faber, London, 1938, p.277

  4. Clark, E.E. Indian Legends of the Pacific Northwest, U. of C. Press, Berkeley, 1963

  5. ibid

  6. Popol Vuh, le livre sacre, ed. Brasseur 1861 CH III, p.25

  7. Brasseur, Sources des nations civilisees du Mexique, I, p.55

  8. Brasseur, Sources de l'histoire Primitive du Mexique, p.28-9

  9. ibid, p.40

  10. de Sahagun, Bernardino. Historia general de las cosas de Nueva Espana, 1938, p.481

  11. Gomara, Conquista de Mexico, II, 261

  12. Williamson, Robert Wood. Religious and Cosmic Beliefs of Central Polynesia, vol. I, Cambridge University Press, 1933, p.8, 37

  13. ibid, p.44

  14. The Epic of Gilgamesh, trans Thompson, Luzac & Co, London, 1928, tablet 11

  15. Charles, R.H. Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha of the Old Testament, Oxford University Press, Vol. II, 1963, 13-28

  16. ibid

  17. Howarth, H.H. The Mammoth and the Flood, Sampson Low, Marston, Searle and Rivington, London 1887

  18. Salomon, Frank, and Urioste, George L. Huarochirí Manuscript: A Testament of Ancient and Colonial Andean Religion, University of Texas Press. 1991

  19. Posnanski, Arthur. Tihuanacu: Cradle of American Man, vol. III, J.J. Augustin, New York and La Paz, 1957, p.142

  20. Osbournem H., South American Mythology, Hamlyn Press, 1968

  21. Ferguson, J.C., Chinese Mythology, Archaeological Institute of America, 1928, p.29

  22. Holmberg, Uno, The Mythology of All Races, Vol. IV, Cooper Square Pubs., 1964, p.364-8

  23. ibid p.369

  24. Turner, An account of an embassy to the court of the Teshoo Lama in Tibet, Cambridge University Press, 1800

  25. MacCulloch, J.A. The Mythology of All Ages, vol. II, Archaeological Institute of America, Boston, 1930, p.188

  26. Warren, Henry Clarke, World Cycles, Buddhism, HArvard University Press, 1896, p.328

  27. Andree, Richard. Die Flutsagen, F. Vieweg und Sohn, Braunschweig, 1891, p.115

  28. Nair, Roshini. "Archeological find affirms Heiltsuk Nation's oral history settlement on B.C.'s Central Coast dated back to 14,000 years," CBC News, March 30, 2017

  29. Yao, Universal Lexicon, Leipsig and Halle, 1732-1754, vol LX; Schoch, Robert, and McNally, Robert. Voyages of the Pyramid Builders: The True Origins of the Pyramids from Lost Egypt to Ancient America, Tarcher/Penguin, New York, 2003

  30. Holmberg, op cit, p.369

  31. The Kalevala, trans. Martin Crawford, Robert Blake Co., Cincinatti, 1888, p.xiii

  32. On T
he Eternity of the World, Vol IX, trans Colson 1941, 146-147

  33. Diodorus of Sicily, trans. Oldfather, The Library of History, II, 31

  34. The Mahabharata, cited Tilak, Lokamanya, The Arctic Home of the Vedas, Tilak Bros., Poona City, 1903, p.420

  35. Peder Steffensen, Jorgen. N.I.B. Center For Ice and Climate, University of Copenhagen, 11, Dec. 2008

  CHAPTER 3

  1. Ansell, John. Kupe’s Descendant Confirms Other Races Were Here First, elocal, National Archives, Waipoua Forest Stone City, May 10, 2013

  2. ibid

  3. Cowan, James. Legends of the Maori, Vol. 1, Southern Reprints, 1987, p.238-9

  4. Timaru Herald, February 24, 1875, p.3

  5. Lesley, Chris. http://greaterancestors.com/timaru-herald-from-new-zealand-1875-reports-of-giants-remains/

  6. ibid; and N.Z. Truth, 29 September 1965, p.13

  7. Plumm, Gabbi, and Marsh, Peter, Skeletons in the Cupboard, Ep. 1, The Redheads, Plummtree Productions, Wellington, 2014

  8. Transactions and Proceedings of the New Zealand Institute, vol. VII, Trubner & Co, London, 1875, p.144-6; and investigative researcher Gary Cook, personal communication

  9. Plumm, Gabbi, and Marsh, Peter, op cit

  10. Ansell, John. op cit

  11. Hill, Marika. "Ngapuhi leader: Red-heads, fair skins beat Maori to NZ", New Zealand Press Herald, 28 December, 2012

  12. Thorsby, Erik. "The Polynesian Gene Pool: An Early Contribution by Amerindians to Easter Island", Royal Society Publishing, vol. 367, Feb 6, 2012

  13. Phillipps, W.J., Journal of the Polynesian Society, Volume 57, Auckland, 1948 p.30

  14. Brailsford, Barry. Song of the Waitaha: The Histories of a Nation, Being the teachings of six Waitaha elders as told to author Barry Brailsford, Wharariki Publishing, Christchurch, 2003, p.33

  15. Papakura, Mākereti. The Old Time Maori, Victor Gollancz, London, 1938

  16. Brailsford, op cit, p.27-8

  17. ibid, p.34-5

  18. ibid

  19. ibid, p.39-40

  20. ibid, p.42

  21. ibid, p.57

  22. ibid, p.185-87

  23. ibid

  24. ibid, p.187

  25. Schoch, Robert, and McNally, Robert. Voyages of the Pyramid Builders: The True Origins of the Pyramids from Lost Egypt to Ancient America, Tarcher/Penguin, New York, 2003

  26. ibid, p.135, p.287-8

  27. Smith, Deborah. Dreaming lead to ancient crater, Sydney Morning Herald, Dec 28, 2009

  28. Brailsford, op cit, p.53

  29. Michell, John. A Little History of Astro-archaeology, Thames & Hudson, London, 1977, et al

  30. Brailsford, op cit, p.43

  31. Te Korako, Makere and Te Porohau Ruka, Whispers of the Waitaha, Wharariki Publishing, comp. Barry Brailsford, Christchurch, 2006. p.201

  32. Brailsford. op cit, p.34

  33. ibid, p.55

  34. Posnanski, op cit

  CHAPTER 4

  1. Schmidt, Gavin, and Frank, Adam, The Silurian Hypothesis: Would it be possible to detect an industrial civilization in the geological record?, Cornell University, 2018

  2. Leon, Pedro Cieza de. Chronicle of Peru, Hakluyk Society, London, 1864 and 1883, Pt. 1, Ch. 87

  3. Osborne, Harold. Indians of the Andes: Aymaras and Quechuas, Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1952, p.64

  4. Silva, Freddy. The Divine Blueprint, Invisible Temple, Portland, 2012, p.33-41

  5. Posnansky, Arthur, Tiahuanacu: The Cradle of American Man, Ministry of Education, Vol. II, Ministry of Education, La Paz, 1957, p.88

  6. ibid, p.91

  7. ibid, p.89

  8. ibid, p.89; and Mueller, Rolf. Der Sonnentempel in den Ruinen von Tihuanacu, Dietrich Reimer, Berlin, 1931

  9. Bellamy, Hans Schindler, and Allen, Paul. The Calendar of Tiahuanaco: A disquisition on the time measuring system of the oldest civilization in the world, Faber and Faber, New York, 1956, p.47

  10. Posnansky, op cit, p.98

  11. ibid, vol. II, p.99

  12. Posnanski, op cit, p.141

  13. ibid, p.140

  14. Based on 1:1.2, the same ratio as 6:5

  15. Mueller, op cit

  16. ibid, p.90

  17. Gamarra, Jesus, and de Jong, Jan Peter. The Cosmology of the Three Worlds, J&J Productions, 2012

  18. Popular Archaeology, Vol. 14, March 1, 2014

  19. Kruzer, A., The Question of the Material Origin of the Walls of the Saqsayhuaman Fortress, isida-project.ucoz.com

  20. ibid

  21. Vega, Garcilaso de la. The Royal Commentaries of the Inca Garcilaso de la Vega, 1539-1616, Orion Press, 1961, p.237

  22. ibid, p.233-35; Markham, Sir Clemens, The Inca of Peru, Smith, Elder & Co, London, 1911, p.33

  23. Vega, op cit, p.4-6

  24. Darmestester, James, and Mills, H.L. The Zend Avesta, 1895, Atlantic Pub reprint, New Delhi, 1990, Part 1, p.5

  25. ibid, p.15-18

  26. Fernandez-Baca Tupayachi, Carlos, Saqsaywaman: A Model of Atlantis, the Untold Story, Munaypacha, Lima, 2006, p. 161

  27. Dillehay, Tom, et al, Chronology, mound-building and environment at Huaca Prieta, coastal Peru, from 13 700 to 4000 years ago, Antiquity Pubs., 86, 2012, p.48-70

  28. Sullivan, William. The Secret of the Incas, Crown, New York, 1996, p.119

  29. Personal communication from Teokotai Andrew, wisdom keeper of Tongareva

  30. Sullivan, op cit, p.219

  CHAPTER 5

  1. Vega, op cit, p.132

  2. Edgar Caceres, personal communication

  3. Kondratov, Alexander, The Riddles of the Three Oceans, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1971, p.79-80

  4. Thompson, William. Te Pito Te Henua, or Easter Island, Government Printing Office, Washington, 1891, p.502

  5. Schoch, Robert, Forgotten Civilizations, Inner Traditions, Rochester, 2012, p.78-9

  6. Kondratov, Alexander, The Riddles of Three Oceans, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1971, p.34

  7. Brown, J. Macmillan. The Riddle of the Pacific, T. Fisher Unwin, London, 1924, p.279

  8. Heyerdahl, Thor. The Kon-Tiki Expedition, Unwin Paperbacks, London, 1882, p.141

  9. Wolff, Werner. Island of Death: A New Key to Easter Island's Culture through an Ethno-psychological Stuidy, J.J. Augustin, New York, 1948, p.156-7, citing Metreux, Alfred. Mysteries of Easter Island, Yale Review 28, 1939, p.771; and Fox, Charles Elliot. The Threshold of the Pacific, Kegan Paul, London, 1924, p.338

  10. Englert, Father Sebastian. Island at the Center of the World: New Light on Easter Island, Robert Hale & Co, London, 1970, p.45

  11. ibid, p.46-7

  12. Maziere, Francis. Mysteries of Easter Island, W.W. Norton, New York, 1968, p.40; Brailsford, op cit, p.35

  13. Heyerdahl, op cit

  14. Schoch, op cit

  15. Schoch, ibid, and private communication

  16. Jo Anne Van Tilburg, personal communication

  17. Te Korako, op cit, p.201

  18. Brailsford, op cit, p.66

  19. ibid, p.160-1, and personal communication

  20. "Rano Raraku Exterior Quarry: Moai sketches and neck tracings (RR-002-077),"Notes from the Easter Island Statue Project Database, www.eisp.org/983/

  21. Validated by Teokotai Andrew.

  22. Thomson, William. Te Pito Te Henua, or Easter Island, in Report of the US National Museum, Under the Direction of the Smithsonian Institution, June 30, w1889 1891, p.462

  23. Brailsford, op cit, p.35

  24. Jenkins, Jere, and Ephraim Fischback, and John Buncher, et al. "Evidence for Correlations between Nuclear Decay Rates and Earth-Sun Distance," Cornell University Library, 2008

  25. Jenkins, Jere, and Ephraim Fischback. Perturbation of Nuclear Decay Rates during the Solar Flare of 13 December 2006," Cornell University Library, 2008;

  26. Schmidt, Klaus, Göbekli Tepe: The Stone Age Sanctuary in South-Eastern Anatolia, Ex Oriente, Berlin, 2012, p.243; How Old Is Göbekli Tepe? The Tepe Telegrams, 6/12/2016

  27.
ibid

  28. ibid

  29. Brailsford, op cit, p.189

  30. Andrew Collins and Rodney Hale, www.andrewcollins.com/page/news/P43.htm

  31. Michael Anissimov, www.wiseGEEK.com

  32. Bauval, Robert, cited in Hancock, Fingerprints of the Gods, Crown, New York, 1995, pp.444-5

  33. Bauval, Robert, and Gilbert, Adrian. The Orion Mystery, Crown Publishers, New York, 1994, p.192-3

  34. Prag, Kay. The 1959 Deep Sounding at Harran in Turkey, Levant 2, 1970, p.71-2

  35. Hassan, Selim, Excavations at Giza, Vol VI, Government Press, Cairo, 1948, p.45

  36. Green, Tamara. The City of the Moon God: Religious Traditions of Harran, E.J. Brill, Leiden, New York, 1992 p.21, 25, 95-7, 100, 121

  37. Al Masudi, Muruj al-dhahab was ma'adin al-jawahir c.960

  38. R.H. Charles, The Book of Jubilees, Adam and Charles Black, London, 1902, pp.71-2

  39. Lloyd, Seton and Brice, William, Harran, Anatolian Studies, Vol I, British Institute of Amkara, 1951, p.71-2

  40. Klaus Schmidt, They Built The First Temples, Verlag C.H. Beck, Munich, 2006

  41. Enix, Linda. The Ancient Architects of Sound, Popular Archaeology, March 2012

  42. Personal communication from Mayan teacher Miguel Angel Vergara

  44. For example, Silva, Freddy, The Lost Art of Resurrection, Invisible Temple, Portland, 2015, p. 53-6

  45. Personal communication, Miguel Angel Vergara

  46. Silva, op cit, p.141-44

  CHAPTER 6

  1. Burpee, Lawrence J. (Ed.): Journals and Letters of Pierre Gaultier de Varennes de la Vérendrye and His Sons. New York, 1968

  2. Fenn, Elizabeth A. Encounters at the Heart of the World: A History of the Mandan People. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2014

  3. Andrew Teokotai, personal communication

 

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