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C$ I.D. of # '51' update-what have you heard Bill?

A

Anonymous

Guest
UPI
Professor A. Derleth of Miskatonic University's Anthropology/Paleontology Dept. recently examined strange greenish stones found on beach near Innsmouth. His finding are that these are some "Bactrian" religious amulets similar to Egyptian Scarab-Beatles, and originating in the Middle East, dating from approximately 8,000 years B.C., and Sumerian in nature, probably from the area of ancient Babylon. But this is in direct contrast with Professor Lovecraft's theory of them being Polynesian in origin. The question remains, how did they come to be found on a beach in the New England region of North America?
 
Alotta people around here believe ancient mariners (Viking, Celt,?) once visited this area long before Columbus. There are unexplained symbols carved into rocks & dolmens (balancing boulders) all over New England. I was going to write a story for the magazine, because I find them all the time in the woods.....
 
Some of the ancient Egyptian pharaohs have been found to have cocaine in their systems. This proves there was world trade going on back then for the only way they could get cocaine was via South America.

That was, what, 2,000 years or more before Christ?
 
where dredging has produced Roman Amphorae, the clay pots used to transport olive oil and wine. How the heck did they get there?

HH from Allen in MI
 
When I was 10 or so, my family went on vacation around Poteau, OK. We visited a sight known as "The Rune Stones". Apparently, Vikings made it all the way into what would become southeastern OK and managed to carve some characters onto an upright limestone slab.

HH from Allen in MI
 
I have also seen that rock, but I thought the rock was at Heavener ?<BR> Don't forget about the Spiro Mounds. They go back a long time...HH..BJ
 
Poteau sprang to mind. I thought the Spiro Mounds (been there as well) were Indian?
 
SPIRO

For a time, between A.D. 1000 - 1200, Spiro was perhaps the most important & powerful of a group of at least 15 Mississippian political-religious centers in eastern Oklahoma. Located on the first terrace & surrounding upland along a bend of the Arkansas River at the intersection of the temperate forest & the Great Plains, it was a natural gateway between societies to the east and the west and was one of the major trade centers in native North America, with its elites controlling exchange & communications networks that expanded westward & northward onto the plains & across the southeastern U.S.

Occupied as early as A.D. 800, reached its peak around A.D. 1000 - 1200, abandoned by 1450
Site covers nearly 100 acres
At its peak consisted of a sizeable village (occupying an upland ridge & portions of the adjacent bottomlands) & two sets of earthworks
One set of earthworks build on the upland ridge and contained a ring of eight mounds erected over the remains of burned or dismantled special buildings; the other set consisted of three mounds built on the bottomlands
The largest of the mounds is Craig Mound (33 feet tall and 400 feet long), a composite mound of four joined mounds built over some 500+ years to cover burials (more than 700) of Sprio's elites - burials contained spectacular artifacts (including objects of wood, cloth, copper, shell, basketry and stone)
Unlike other Mississippian centers, Spiro never fortified by either a stockade or moat
From A.D. 1200 to 1400, a large community developed on the uplands and terraces around the Spiro site - few, if any, people actually living at site itself with the mounds visited periodically ritual & ceremonial activities, including burial of elites & attendant mound construction
Site abandoned by late 15th century & by mid-16th century, Spiro's descendants living in hamlets scattered along Arkansas River subsisting on a mix of farming & bison hunting

The people at Spiro imported a vast aray of exotic goods (raw materials as well as finish products) and their artisans fashioned them into a wide variety of elaborately decorated objects, including ceremonial cups, batons and other symbols of status and authority. Conch shell and copper were favored materials & artisans used a variety of techniques (including engraving & embossing) for depicting elaborate dance & gambling scenes, stylized pictures of warriors, and renditions of various (presumably) mythological creatures, including spiders, serpents (both winged & antlered) and cats - all iconographic elements that later became important in the mythologies of historic southeastern tribes. Exotic goods found at Spiro include:

conch shells from western coastal Florida
copper from the Southeast and other regions
lead from Iowa and Missouri
pottery from northeast Arkansas and Tennessee
quartz from central Arkansas
flint from Kansas, Texas, Tennessee and southern Illinois



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To comment on this page please send mail to Chuck Smith at crsmith@cabrillo.cc.ca.us
Last modified on 7 March 1998.
 
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