Gobekli-Tepe Oldest so far I Question the Baskets?
42 posts
• Page 4 of 5 • 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
mumin wrote:why are you looking at the baskets?
I'd be way more concerned about their fancy wrist watches!
This birdman is loaded! He's wearing two rolex type devices in his hands. One shows local time and other his homeplanets! And he has a cybernetic parts too. Look at those pistons under his arm and that elegant hi-tech leg! Robocock!

------------------------------

canubis wrote:
a hill goes up not digs itself into a grave newbie.. lol i made the word LOL in 95 on ms CHAT orels ill be saying ROFLMAO fkn n00b

canubis wrote:
a hill goes up not digs itself into a grave newbie.. lol i made the word LOL in 95 on ms CHAT orels ill be saying ROFLMAO fkn n00b
dukettt wrote:mumin wrote:why are you looking at the baskets?
I'd be way more concerned about their fancy wrist watches!
This birdman is loaded! He's wearing two rolex type devices in his hands. One shows local time and other his homeplanets! And he has a cybernetic parts too. Look at those pistons under his arm and that elegant hi-tech leg! Robocock!
nice association, certainly that leg looks suspicious.


- Chillitiger

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- Posts: 187
- Joined: Mon Apr 25, 2011 12:56 pm
I would most certainly think the object the in the opposite hand would be a siberian or lebenon cedar cone. For any one who has read the ringing cedars books this would make sense. For those of you that do not know about it do some research on cedar trees in both the bible ( which I have no attachment to but as a resource it can be effective) and in other scriptures etc. The cedar is said to conatin a great many healing properties and of all trees is most in sync with the human biorhythms.
King Soloman built his whole temple of cedar and gave away 20 CITIES for the wood and people with the SPECIFIC SKILL to harvest it. That is a lot to pay for some wood.

some other quick excerpts from various ancient texts.
In the famous Epic of Gilgamesh (Sumer, 2700 BC), the Goddess of Love (in ancient times Inanna was considered to be the Goddess of Love), infatuated with the handsome Gilgamesh, offered him to be her husband by saying: “Be you my husband, and I will be your wife!… Come into our house, with the fragrance of cedar.” "I have covered myself with the oil and scent of cedar. I am as honey… The fragrant cedar oil on my skin shall be as a path of love, which summons you to the tenderness I seek to make you smile and to give you happiness.” Man and woman are drawn to each other by forces unknown. The power of these forces symbolizes love.
***
"Gilgamesh offered to cut the giant cedars on the edge of the forest...and the axes made by Uruk’s masters began to work. ...…And Gilgamesh began to cut the trees while Enkidu rooted out the stumps. And when their work was done, Enkidu said to his friend: “Hang your battle axe on your belt…let us take the cedars to the shore of the Euphrates!”
***
“And as a sign that he wished to wed Inanna, Dumuzi, in the custom of his ancestors, poured cedar oil on the doorstep of the house of Ningal..."
Let us turn to historical facts:
Needles were used as a remedy many thousand years BC. Sumerian clay tablets, found during archaeological excavations of the ancient kingdom of Sumer, confirm that needle extracts and decoctions were used in compresses and stupes as early as 5,000 BC.
***
In ancient Babylon, aromatic oils were added to construction materials used to build temples. The well-known antimicrobial properties of cedar oil ensured that temples were disinfected.
***
Druids, the ancient Celtic priests, possessed deep knowledge about the nature of trees and their connection with man and the Universe. The cedar was one of a number of “healing trees” they identified. The cedar’s special properties were noted by several races in the Bible. Thus, in Leviticus, the third book of Moses, God teaches priests to heal people. Of all the plants, only cedar is mentioned several times as a healing and cleansing tree (a cure for leprosy, among others).

This from Wiki:
The Cedar of Lebanon was important to various ancient civilizations. The trees were used by the Phoenicians for building commercial and military ships, as well as houses, palaces, and temples. The ancient Egyptians used its resin in mummification, and its sawdust has been found in the tombs of Egyptian Pharaohs. The Sumerian Epic of Gilgamesh designates the cedar groves of Lebanon as the dwelling of the gods to which Gilgamesh, the hero, ventured.
Hebrew priests were ordered by Moses to use the bark of the Lebanon Cedar in circumcision[citation needed]and the treatment of leprosy.[13] The Hebrew prophet Isaiah used the Lebanon Cedar as a metaphor for the pride of the world.[14] According to the Talmud, Jews once burned Lebanese cedar wood on the Mount of Olives to celebrate the new year. Foreign rulers from both near and far would order the wood for religious and civil constructs, the most famous of which are King Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem and David's and Solomon's Palaces. Because of its significance the word Cedar is mentioned 75 times (Cedar 51 times, Cedars 24 times) in the Bible, and played a pivotal role in the cementing of the Phoenician-Hebrew relationship.[clarification needed] Beyond that, it was also used by Romans, Greeks, Persians, Assyrians and Babylonians.
King Soloman built his whole temple of cedar and gave away 20 CITIES for the wood and people with the SPECIFIC SKILL to harvest it. That is a lot to pay for some wood.
some other quick excerpts from various ancient texts.
In the famous Epic of Gilgamesh (Sumer, 2700 BC), the Goddess of Love (in ancient times Inanna was considered to be the Goddess of Love), infatuated with the handsome Gilgamesh, offered him to be her husband by saying: “Be you my husband, and I will be your wife!… Come into our house, with the fragrance of cedar.” "I have covered myself with the oil and scent of cedar. I am as honey… The fragrant cedar oil on my skin shall be as a path of love, which summons you to the tenderness I seek to make you smile and to give you happiness.” Man and woman are drawn to each other by forces unknown. The power of these forces symbolizes love.
***
"Gilgamesh offered to cut the giant cedars on the edge of the forest...and the axes made by Uruk’s masters began to work. ...…And Gilgamesh began to cut the trees while Enkidu rooted out the stumps. And when their work was done, Enkidu said to his friend: “Hang your battle axe on your belt…let us take the cedars to the shore of the Euphrates!”
***
“And as a sign that he wished to wed Inanna, Dumuzi, in the custom of his ancestors, poured cedar oil on the doorstep of the house of Ningal..."
Let us turn to historical facts:
Needles were used as a remedy many thousand years BC. Sumerian clay tablets, found during archaeological excavations of the ancient kingdom of Sumer, confirm that needle extracts and decoctions were used in compresses and stupes as early as 5,000 BC.
***
In ancient Babylon, aromatic oils were added to construction materials used to build temples. The well-known antimicrobial properties of cedar oil ensured that temples were disinfected.
***
Druids, the ancient Celtic priests, possessed deep knowledge about the nature of trees and their connection with man and the Universe. The cedar was one of a number of “healing trees” they identified. The cedar’s special properties were noted by several races in the Bible. Thus, in Leviticus, the third book of Moses, God teaches priests to heal people. Of all the plants, only cedar is mentioned several times as a healing and cleansing tree (a cure for leprosy, among others).

This from Wiki:
The Cedar of Lebanon was important to various ancient civilizations. The trees were used by the Phoenicians for building commercial and military ships, as well as houses, palaces, and temples. The ancient Egyptians used its resin in mummification, and its sawdust has been found in the tombs of Egyptian Pharaohs. The Sumerian Epic of Gilgamesh designates the cedar groves of Lebanon as the dwelling of the gods to which Gilgamesh, the hero, ventured.
Hebrew priests were ordered by Moses to use the bark of the Lebanon Cedar in circumcision[citation needed]and the treatment of leprosy.[13] The Hebrew prophet Isaiah used the Lebanon Cedar as a metaphor for the pride of the world.[14] According to the Talmud, Jews once burned Lebanese cedar wood on the Mount of Olives to celebrate the new year. Foreign rulers from both near and far would order the wood for religious and civil constructs, the most famous of which are King Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem and David's and Solomon's Palaces. Because of its significance the word Cedar is mentioned 75 times (Cedar 51 times, Cedars 24 times) in the Bible, and played a pivotal role in the cementing of the Phoenician-Hebrew relationship.[clarification needed] Beyond that, it was also used by Romans, Greeks, Persians, Assyrians and Babylonians.
Yes i'll admit it.... I think Max Keiser is a LEGEND
Did you notice in the stone carving how they are all contacting each other? When I was little, my brother would line up a bunch of kids and the kid on one end would touch an exposed electical current and the kid on the other end of the chain of kids would get zapped. They knew how to transfer energy through people by making a human chain I bet.
Oh, also doesn't ceritain types of electricity make plants and animals grow bigger in some cases? I'm also researching into ley lines and underground water intersections and there seems to be research going back 100's of years that it emits higher levels of electro-magnetic energy which increases cancers in plants and animals as well.
Oh, also doesn't ceritain types of electricity make plants and animals grow bigger in some cases? I'm also researching into ley lines and underground water intersections and there seems to be research going back 100's of years that it emits higher levels of electro-magnetic energy which increases cancers in plants and animals as well.
chillitiger wrote:I would most certainly think the object the in the opposite hand would be a siberian or lebenon cedar cone. For any one who has read the ringing cedars books this would make sense. For those of you that do not know about it do some research on cedar trees in both the bible ( which I have no attachment to but as a resource it can be effective) and in other scriptures etc. The cedar is said to conatin a great many healing properties and of all trees is most in sync with the human biorhythms.
King Soloman built his whole temple of cedar and gave away 20 CITIES for the wood and people with the SPECIFIC SKILL to harvest it. That is a lot to pay for some wood.
some other quick excerpts from various ancient texts.
In the famous Epic of Gilgamesh (Sumer, 2700 BC), the Goddess of Love (in ancient times Inanna was considered to be the Goddess of Love), infatuated with the handsome Gilgamesh, offered him to be her husband by saying: “Be you my husband, and I will be your wife!… Come into our house, with the fragrance of cedar.” "I have covered myself with the oil and scent of cedar. I am as honey… The fragrant cedar oil on my skin shall be as a path of love, which summons you to the tenderness I seek to make you smile and to give you happiness.” Man and woman are drawn to each other by forces unknown. The power of these forces symbolizes love.
***
"Gilgamesh offered to cut the giant cedars on the edge of the forest...and the axes made by Uruk’s masters began to work. ...…And Gilgamesh began to cut the trees while Enkidu rooted out the stumps. And when their work was done, Enkidu said to his friend: “Hang your battle axe on your belt…let us take the cedars to the shore of the Euphrates!”
***
“And as a sign that he wished to wed Inanna, Dumuzi, in the custom of his ancestors, poured cedar oil on the doorstep of the house of Ningal..."
Let us turn to historical facts:
Needles were used as a remedy many thousand years BC. Sumerian clay tablets, found during archaeological excavations of the ancient kingdom of Sumer, confirm that needle extracts and decoctions were used in compresses and stupes as early as 5,000 BC.
***
In ancient Babylon, aromatic oils were added to construction materials used to build temples. The well-known antimicrobial properties of cedar oil ensured that temples were disinfected.
***
Druids, the ancient Celtic priests, possessed deep knowledge about the nature of trees and their connection with man and the Universe. The cedar was one of a number of “healing trees” they identified. The cedar’s special properties were noted by several races in the Bible. Thus, in Leviticus, the third book of Moses, God teaches priests to heal people. Of all the plants, only cedar is mentioned several times as a healing and cleansing tree (a cure for leprosy, among others).
This from Wiki:
The Cedar of Lebanon was important to various ancient civilizations. The trees were used by the Phoenicians for building commercial and military ships, as well as houses, palaces, and temples. The ancient Egyptians used its resin in mummification, and its sawdust has been found in the tombs of Egyptian Pharaohs. The Sumerian Epic of Gilgamesh designates the cedar groves of Lebanon as the dwelling of the gods to which Gilgamesh, the hero, ventured.
Hebrew priests were ordered by Moses to use the bark of the Lebanon Cedar in circumcision[citation needed]and the treatment of leprosy.[13] The Hebrew prophet Isaiah used the Lebanon Cedar as a metaphor for the pride of the world.[14] According to the Talmud, Jews once burned Lebanese cedar wood on the Mount of Olives to celebrate the new year. Foreign rulers from both near and far would order the wood for religious and civil constructs, the most famous of which are King Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem and David's and Solomon's Palaces. Because of its significance the word Cedar is mentioned 75 times (Cedar 51 times, Cedars 24 times) in the Bible, and played a pivotal role in the cementing of the Phoenician-Hebrew relationship.[clarification needed] Beyond that, it was also used by Romans, Greeks, Persians, Assyrians and Babylonians.
Cedars and the sundried bark is extremely high in vitamin C, same with many trees bark, easy to store. But the plants do need to be dried so as to let the alkaliods dissipate. Plus when you use cedar, you can boil and bend it easily and shape and bind it and it's strong but flexible.
you have obviously never been berry picking lol" , uh well zachariah sitchin', said the baskets were symbles of genetic engineering . He say them as buckets so maybe baskets were lined with something waterproof . But actually there could be a lot of reasons to mention like measurment or food storage (lunch pails) who knows maybe they were full of gold coins or herbs to smoke , medicine or some benevolent sign of rulership. i always try to include the obviouse when interpeting the past.
- Hurtswhenipee

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- Posts: 700
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- Location: Questioning Building 7,.......... Stop HAARP ..........Stop HydroFracking
This video shows a few carvings I have not seen yet.
"Monsanto is just like the Umbrella Corporation in Resident Evil" 



Has anyone looked at the hands on this one and compared it to the ones on easter Island???? Just seems very similar!!!
http://humansarefree.com/2011/01/gobekl ... emple.html
http://www.google.ch/imgres?q=easter+is ... x=92&ty=87
http://humansarefree.com/2011/01/gobekl ... emple.html
http://www.google.ch/imgres?q=easter+is ... x=92&ty=87
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