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Pallava&Chola antara kerajaan boneka dalang Melayu semenanjung di India sejak zaman neolitik hingga abad ke13
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Boleh percaya ke semua ni? Kadang rasa macam nak percaya kadang rasa macam tipu jek ???? |
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Terpulang kepada minda masng masing
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Macam terlebih ketum je klaim tu huhu |
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Bodohnya ente punya cenonot. Semua bukti sahih dan bukti genetik sudah ana bentangkan
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Some races in the Black Sea region not only made the most of Malaysian intercontinental shipping services made available to them from ca 1600BCE - 500BCE by partially emigrating to SE Asia like the Sarmatians did at Thammarat in southern Thailand but they also hired Malaysian ships to bring them to Peru where they could easily play gods&godesses with the natives.
https://www.ancient-origins.net/news-history-archaeology/paracas-skulls-dna-020914
From the samples, only the mitochondrial DNA (DNA from the mother’s side) could be extracted. Out of four hair samples, one of them couldn’t be sequenced. The remaining three hair samples all showed a Haplogroup (genetic population group) of H2A, which is found most frequently in Eastern Europe, and at a low frequency in Western Europe. The bone powder from the most elongated skull tested came back as T2B, which originates in Mesopotamia and what is now Syria, essentially the heart of the fertile crescent. “It rewrites history as we know it,” said Marzulli.
“If these results hold,” writes Brien Foerster on his website Hidden Inca Tours, “the history of the migration of people to the Americas is far more complex than we have been told previously.”
If these results are confirmed through further tests, it means that peoples from Europe and the Middle East migrated to the Americas long before it is conventionally believed. This is a huge discovery, and yet as far as Ancient Origins can establish, no further testing has been done.
Marzulli said that mainstream academics will probably attack these results by pointing to the fact that he is not a scientist, but he urges any skeptic to replicate the study.
“Attack the evidence folks. Go down and get your own samples, pay for a DNA lab and then come back to me with your science… do some science like we’ve done,” he said.
The full lab reports of the DNA tests are available in LA Marzulli’s book Nephilim Hybrids.
Now, although these results do seem surprising, DNA native to Europeans found in native Americans is not unique too this DNA result.
In an article, published in 2013 (before this testing) about DNA found in Native Americans, linking them with Europe. The report writes:
‘’…from the complete nuclear genome of a Siberian boy who died 24,000 years ago - the oldest complete genome of a modern human sequenced to date. His DNA shows clse ties to those of today’s Native Americans. Yet he apparently descended not from East Asians, but from people who had arrived in Europe or Western Asia…the finding suggests that about a third of the ancestry of today’s Native Americans can be traced to ‘western Eurasia’”
As mainstream archaeology states South America was populated by migration south from North America (around 16-19000 years ago), it is perhaps not such a surprise to find European DNA in South American DNA, just has been found in North American DNA.
The Debate Continues
In the YouTube video "Complete Examination of the Ancient Paracas People of Peru Including DNA Results and Blood Tests,", first aired in 2017, Brian Forester details his thoughts on the results of the DNA testing which he and his associates commissioned.
He reports that the results revealed that four of the elongated skulls belonged to Hao Group B, indicating Native American ancestry, while the other skulls did not match this group. The most common Hao groups identified were U2e and H1a, which are predominantly found in the Black Sea and Caspian Sea areas.
Forestago,suggests that the Paracas people may have originated from the Caucasus region around 3,000 years ago and migrated to the coast of Peru. This proposal points to a significant ancient migration pattern, revealing European and Eurasian haplogroups, which challenges conventional academic views.
But What About the Hair?
The results could help explain the fact that many of the Paracas skulls still contain traces of red hair, a color that is not natively found in South America but originates in the Middle East and Europe.
“No academics as far as we can tell can explain why some of the skulls that still have hair are red or even blonde,” writes Brien Foerster, “the idea that this is from time or bleaching has NOW been disproven by 2 hair experts. For the ancient Paracas people, at least, they had blonde to reddish hair that is 30% thinner than NATIVE American hair. It is GENETIC!”
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Edited by pokaibanktokyo at 22-1-2025 10:40 AM
Kegiatan luar tabii orang Australia di Kemboja dan Vietnam sebahagiannya berpunca dari tabiat ibu masing masing yang gemar mengongkek binatang terutamanya anjing. Maka keturunan mereka juga dijangka akan bergelumang dengan gejala yang sama memandangkan isteri orang Australia semua akan berterusan main dengan haiwan. |
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![](static/image/common/ico_lz.png)
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Post time 22-1-2025 06:13 PM
From the mobile phone
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Sejak bermulanya penjelajahan oleh Malaysia ke serata dunia pada alaf kedua sebelum masehi lagi telah wujud persaingan antara mereka. Maka tatkala tercetus persengketaan di kalangan negara negara penakluk dari Malaysia ini ianya dengan pantas terus tersebar ke serata dunia. Dalam erti kata lain, perang dunia paling awal dalam sejarah manusia adalah di antara kuasa kuasa terhebat dari Semenanjung Tanah Melayu dan melibatkan setiap benua walaupun pengkaji sejarah sehingga kini hanya mampu mengenalpasti beberapa pertempuran di benua Asia dan Eropah sahaja seperti dalam pautan di bawah ini.
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/archaeology/world-war-1-battlefields-archaeology-secrets-b2620550.html
Archaeologists are revealing the long-lost secrets of the real First World War – a series of conflicts that unfolded across much of Europe, the Mediterranean, North Africa and the Middle East some 32 centuries ago.
New research published on Monday reveals how two substantial armies from two different parts of Europe fought to the death in a major battle just south of the Baltic Sea. The two armies appear to have come from at least 400 miles apart – a southern one from Bavaria (or from what is now the Czech Republic) and a northern one from what is now north-east Germany.
But the battle, involving up to 2,000 warriors, seems to have been part of a series of conflicts and crises which caused chaos across a large swathe of the world from Scandinavia to the Sahara and from Western Europe to what is now Iraq.
This aerial view shows northern Germany’s Tollense Valley and the archaeological excavations that have been unearthing the secrets of Bronze Age warfare
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This aerial view shows northern Germany’s Tollense Valley and the archaeological excavations that have been unearthing the secrets of Bronze Age warfare (S. Sauer)
The battle, just south of the Baltic, was fought in the valley of the River Tollense in around 1250BC.
“It appears to have been just the tip of a conflict iceberg which spread turmoil across vast areas in the mid-to-late 13th and early-to-mid 12th centuries BC,” said one of the world’s leading authority on the period, Professor Barry Molloy of University College Dublin
This dramatic 12th century image portrays a battle between Egyptian troops and warriors who arrived by sea, probably from the islands of Mediterranean Europe (Wikimedia Commons)
Part of the battle was fought around a strategically and economically important bridge across the Tollense river. Indeed it may well have been a conflict over control of a vital trade route. That’s because the well-constructed Bronze Age road over the bridge was part of an important long-distance route connecting southern Europe with the Baltic (and it’s known that trade between the Mediterranean and Scandinavia involved valuable commodities like Mediterranean glass beads and copper and Baltic amber).
“Our study of this battlefield completely changes our understanding of Bronze Age society,” said the prehistorian, Professor Thomas Terberger of the University of Göttingen, a co-author of today’s Antiquity paper.
“Our investigations have been revealing the unexpected scale and level of military and political organisation in that period,” he added.
“The battle in the Tollense Valley is the earliest direct archaeological evidence ever found for fighting between substantial armies in Europe,” said University College Dublin’s Professor Molloy.
Interestingly, the battle in the Tollense Valley (and many of the other Late Bronze Age instability events elsewhere in Europe and the Middle East) took place at around the same time as iconic stories described in the Bible and in Greek epic literature – including the Israelite Exodus from Egypt and the Trojan War.
Scandinavian warriors on a rock engraving near Tanumshede in Sweden
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Scandinavian warriors on a rock engraving near Tanumshede in Sweden (Wikicommons)
Taken as a whole, the instability, economic decline and widespread violence of the mid-to-late 13th and early-to-mid 12th centuries BC is known as the Late Bronze Age Collapse.
It is increasingly being seen as not only a very major transformative episode in world history, but also one of its most complex and enigmatic. Although substantial amounts of research are currently underway, it’s not yet known what caused the collapse.
Climatic factors were almost certainly involved, but earthquakes and disease pandemics are likely to have also played their part.
What's more, another factor was almost certainly involved – a factor which has profound implications for our own 21st century AD world, threatened as it is by climate change and other phenomena.
The inside of a Bronze Age warrior’s skull, showing how it had been penetrated by a lethal enemy bronze arrowhead
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The inside of a Bronze Age warrior’s skull, showing how it had been penetrated by a lethal enemy bronze arrowhead (MINKUSIMAGES/Antiquity Journal)
The pre-collapse Bronze Age civilizations were, in many ways, extremely complex, especially in organisational, political and economic terms – and they therefore appear to have exceeded their ability to “reassemble” themselves after a major environmental, economic or military shock. It’s a phenomenon which historians call “overshoot”.
What’s more, it’s not yet fully understood how the different conflicts in different parts of the Bronze Age European, Middle Eastern and North African worlds were or were not connected. However, because of societal and economic complexity, especially trade links and technological interdependence, it is likely that, like falling dominoes, many of the conflicts and crises of the Late Bronze Age Collapse triggered other conflicts and crises in other areas that had not yet been affected.
At the battle site currently being studied in northern Germany’s Tollense Valley, it’s also not yet clear who won that particular battle, although some evidence points towards an at least temporary victory for the local north German population
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open image in gallery
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