GREENLAND: MORE
PREHISTORIC RUINS
UNEARTHED NEAR
ITTOQQORTOORNIIT
Recent climate change has devastated the polar
regions of the Earth with more glacial areas losing
cubic tons of ancient ice over the world. Greenland has
experienced great loses within the last few years, and
with it the appearance of lands buried for tens of
millions of years are now surrendering their ancient
secrets.
Nuuk - After the announcement by the
Danish National Office of Science and
Technology on the discovery of
paletholic ruins found in the Roosevelt
Mountains near Pearly Land in northern
Greenland, another team of Greenland
University archaeologists have begun
excavations on another site near
Ittoqqortoormiit some 1000 miles to
the south, where they believe the same
mysterious prehistoric culture had
established what appears to be an
ancient ruin containing several
megalithic structures.
Investigating enticing images from the
NOAA's DCSOVR (Deep Space Climate
Observer) satellite dispatched on May 2020,
science teams began searching for
additional evidence of the mysterious
culture that may have ruled Greenland long
before being encased in polar ice.
The largest Ittoqqortoormilt monolith 103 miles east of
the town, where the discovery was made by local
hunters. The relic has been revealed to be composed of
basaltic lava, which was carved and transported to the
location from quarry pits yet undiscovered. As of four
years ago the entire scene was under 250 feet of ice
until the results of climate change released the relics
from their icy prisons.
The University of Greenland archaeologists
were dispatched to search for several
suspected megalithic monoliths of the newly
discovered culture dating some 200,000
years old and reported in 2019, when they
uncovered several unidentified stone relics
of unique masonry design.
The most intriguing find discovered at the
Ittoqqortoormiit site was a flat masonry
plate, carved into what strongly resembled
what scientists believed to be a fertility
goddess idol, with long serpentine arms and
transformational female facial features
wearing a headdress. A stone figurine with
similar characteristics had been discovered
at the Roosevelt Mountains find in 2020,
leading science commentators from Bourne
University to believe they may have found
the ruins of the T'kai. Evidence is still being
processed, and more analysis are needed to
shed light on the enigma.
University of Greenland archaeologists arrive to
investigate sighting of another monolith 240 miles
northwest of Ittoqqortoormiit.
"More evidence from the Book of Gates,"
announced Clifford Shaver, Professor at the
Wegner School of Paleontology at Bourne
University. "These T'kai relics discovered
this year, were astoundingly documented in
Jebidiah Smith's ‘A Commentary on the
Book of Gates’ (1868) First Edition. These
were the offspring of the First Gods ‘mixed
with the essence of men to create what
Smith called the T'kai. Now we have solid
evidence. This proves once again that
Professor Jebidiah Smith's work was not
based on passing occultic or spiritual
information but on actual archaeological
history we knew nothing about."
Professor Shaver then read a quote from
the Commentary he mentioned:
"The T'kai cities stood on
Plateau of Pnoth, great
stone heads marked
Greater Yidath's west
cliffs, Their walls like
great forbidding towers,
the First Gods dwelt
within those T'kai
temples, They were the
root of none, as the First
Gods had caught men,
and mingled their seed
with them, So created
then the Children of the
First Gods, who change
shape, and drank the
souls of men."
From A Commentary on the Book of Gates
(page 234)
While nowhere near as extensive as the
ruins found in the Pearly Land region, the
excavations are producing more tantalizing
items that is rewarding the University of
Greenland scientists. The unidentified
culture has not yet been given any official
archaeological designation, and there is to
be seen if any human remains will be found
nearby due to the difficulty of the frozen
Greenland environment and small window of
seasonal brevity where the excavations
must be performed.
"These were not Paleo-
Eskimos as the Saqqaq
culture who arrived in
2500 BC, the
Independence I culture
from 2400 BC, the
Independence II culture
from 800 BC, the later
Dorset or the Thule
peoples, "Professor
Shaver remarked. "These
ruins predate perhaps
even when Greenland
was free of ice, some 10
million years ago. While
there is the possibility the
civilization declined
because of the
environmental changes
that took place during
the glacial ages, we have
yet to be certain until
more work is done."
The Ittoqqortoormiit monuments are located
on the Greenland craton, an ancient piece of
primal Earth some 3 billion years old that
stretches throughout the country, making it
one of the oldest continental fragments on
Earth.
While the first Paleo-Eskimo were not builders of large
permanent structures and relied on nomadic
livelihoods, the Viking Age settlements (793-1066 AD)
saw three large cultures built on Greenland's soil, until
the arrival of a mini ice age in 1400 AD saw the final
abandonment.
"What peoples build this stone age
civilization during a period when even Homo
sapiens were not believed to exist, what
civilization did they build, and what
happened to them? We are looking forward
to returning next summer so these difficult
questions can be answered," said Professor
Jesper Berthelson, head archaeologist from
the University of Greenland and managing
director of the forthcoming 2021
Ittoqqortoormiit excavation.
WHO WERE THE TKAI?
Stone bas-relief of the T'kai found at Ittoqqortoormiit.
A idol thought to first be a fertility goddess was found
at the in the ruin's northern area strongly resembling
this carving, both in female form, headdress and
physical characteristics.
According to Oxford Professor Jebidiah
Smith (1808-1870?), in his most famous
work "A Commentary on the Book of Gates
(1868)" the T'kai were an ancient race that
lived on the Greenland craton on what was
known four billion years ago to be part of
the first continent of Yidath. Smith stated
with authority that when Yidath broke up
and slid beneath the waves, portions of that
primal continent, moving under the
geological processes of continental drift,
part of Yidath was moved to the far north
and became what is now known as
Greenland.
Stone
tablet
found
near
the
southern
map
site
which
is
believed
to
represent
the
tall
pyramid
buildings
the
T'kai
used
as
cities.
Large
mounds
found
at
Ittoqqortoormiit
buried
in
ice
have
been
seen
in
the
NOAA's
DCSOVR
satellite
image
data from 2020.
While he stated the first races and animals
had evolved normally, the T'kai were an
early construct of the First Gods and men
when they decided to experiment with
mixing both in what could be called the first
case of DNA tampering. The T'kai were
described as female in appearance, but had
tubular legs and tentacles that were used to
'drain the souls of men' for their sustenance
and were created by mixing the 'essence' of
men and the First Gods, retaining both
characteristics of each. They were also
known to build great stone monuments of
their faces, which were said to be erected
on the western of Greater Yidath on rock
cliffs facing the west, where their territory
was forbidden.
Artist rendition of the Roosevelt Mountain grand
monuments, facing west, would have looked like when
the glacial ages began covering Greenland. Scientists
believe the civilization was likely abandoned long
before or during the Greenland climate turned polar,
devastating agriculture.
Some scholars may scoff at such
pseudoscientific musings of a 19th century
academic whose work was more intuned to
spiritism than to hard archaeological
science, but over the world excavations
have produced a different ending. For
example, the idea of continental drift, with
the mass of geological and paleontological
data, was first proposed by Alfred Wegener,
a German meteorologist in 1912. Modern
science has validated this. Yet Smith
described this process in his work "A
Commentary on the Book of Gates (1868)"
some 44 years before, not to mention
startling revelations about evolution and
geology.
One thing is certain. Time will tell if Jebidiah
Smith's predictions of the Earth's hidden
history are just coincidence or something
more. Only time will tell.
THE BOURNE JOURNAL OF
ARCHAEOLOGY
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