England
What a great story!
Israel / Africa
Still my annoyance grows at the stupidity of this whole theory. I am constantly reiterating my point, over and over again, so let’s have a recap:
The prevailing theory:
Humans were thought to have left Africa 50,000 years ago, but new findings pushed this date back to 100,000 years. Then more new findings, and more new findings, and here we have another one, which pushes the date back. Scientists often cannot think outside of the box; it seems they are incapable of doing so, and that is the frustrating part.
Here’s the theory I have proposed in my 2014 book, The Evolution, and which I continue to argue:
Pre-human hominids left Africa, possible millions of years ago. Those that remained in Africa evolved into the African race – what we would term ‘Sub-Saharan Africa’. Two other groups migrated – one to the Middle East, and even as far as India, and eventually into Europe. The other migrated farther east and evolved into the Oriental race.
So, instead of continuing to push these dates back, why can’t they try a new theory? I am not suggesting mine is correct, but it is at least offering a different solution. It’s like they are trying to put a square plug into a round hole, and instead of putting the square plug down and picking up a round one, they just keep filing the edges of the square plug until it fits. The problem is, new findings, over and over again, prove the theory is no longer valid.
One of the most profound findings was two years ago when human remains were found in Greece, dating to 7.2 million years ago. This finding places “humans” outside of Africa before humans even evolved:
https://www.stephenmaybury.co.uk/out-of-africa-theory-of-human-origins-finally-disproven-beyond-doubt/
Then there were the 5-million-year-old footprints found on Crete:
https://www.stephenmaybury.co.uk/the-enigma-of-the-5-7-million-year-old-hominid-footprints-found-in-crete/
Crete has been an island for millions of years, so how did these footprints get there? Either those creatures arrived millions of years ago, so far into the past that the entire theory of evolution has to be nothing more than a joke, or they managed to cross the sea. Either one of those possibilities blows the entire theory of Evolution, and especially Out-of-Africa, entirely out of the window!
So, are they ignoring this stuff on purpose, or is it me?
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/oldest-evidence-of-humans-outside-africa-discovered/ar-BBToDZ7?li=BBnbfcL&ocid=SL5FDHP
Slovenia
Mystery woman found in early Roman cemetery in the town of Emona
If you don’t read the article, at least view the slideshow. Those artefacts are breathtaking, especially the small blue bowl.
So, just who is this woman? Clearly she was someone very important within this community, and since Romans didn’t revere women in the same kind of light – in regards to burials I mean – then no doubt this woman had a particularly high status that was unique.
By the time of her burial – 300 AD (+/-) – Christianity was the dominant religion as the Roman Empire had shifted to the east, and had also been Christianised under Constantine when he ruled from 306 AD.
This is an intriguing mystery and one that stands out among many others. The fact her original burial was upgraded a decade later shows this woman was as important as the angels themselves. The correlation with the time of her upgraded burial and the rule of Constantine suggests this might be connected with his rule in some way. That might not make sense to many but if you are familiar with the life and rule of Constantine it will make total sense.
So, what could she possibly have done to the local community to get such a high status? Was she extremely wealthy and gave a lot of money to local projects? Or was there some other reason?
The article states the population of this town were all Romans from northern Italy, but I’m hedging my bets that this woman was from the local area.
Let’s hope DNA tests will prove one way or the other.
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/culture/2019/01/mystery-woman-cemetery-ljubljana-slovenia-archaeology/