Who were the Dingling: Part III

Johanna Laakso johanna.laakso at univie.ac.at
Sun Aug 19 22:37:58 UTC 2001


These mammoth 'taos' appear to have holes that suggest
scapulimancy and plastron divination, so
Chinese-Algonkian, yet certainly worth considering
that the use of animal bones as a support for
fire-making are rational, for if not wood, then bone,
because the heat would not dissipate, opposing
ignition, as in some other materials. There seems to
have been a method of flaking so as to form the
cutting edge of the mammoth 'tao.'

The anti-christ, anti-sun is found at Adrenko,
Drevnosti Prieniseiskoi sibiri(1996) krasno i arsk:
Izd-vo krasno i arskago universiteta(Yenisey River
Region], P.116-120 Preliminary Interpretations of
Graphs. The yin-yang symbol is also here as well as
the phases of the moon. A ram's head whorl is also
depicted. A depiction of a whorl on the temple of a
man resembling spiny additions much as on a murex
shell, are at Sibiri panoramie tysiacheletii(1998)V.1,
p.65, figs.4 and 5. Seal hunting in Baikalia, the land
of Cinggis Khan, and the harpoon heads on p.144. On
page 34 is a representation of a Maltese cross, the
angle may or may not be close to the 120 degrees of
the Paleolithic artifact or the design created in
Tyndall's experiment.

In Part IV, is discussed the proto-Uralic word for
fire as well as its strong correspondence in the Udihe
word for fire, these pointing to the origins of the
elusive Chinese unicorn.

Mike Lawrence <hoosiersky2002 at yahoo.com>

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