Is it a bird, is it a plane? No, it’s a moose!
Posted On: Apr 23rd, 2015 at 11:31
Russia
Throwing up a string of surprises, our friends from the largest country on earth have now produced the world’s oldest geoglyph, up to 4,000 years older than the famous Nazca glyphs!
The moose, or should I say elk considering its location, dates from between 4000 – 3000 BC, some 5 to 6,000 years ago, and is located in the Urals, approximately 130 miles west of Chelyabink.
Not only is the elk’s age astonishing, but there’s proof that children were a part of the creation because of tools found. Alternatively, during those days humans were involved in geoglyph making with friendly gnomes. You decide.
The thing that sticks out in my mind, however, is that geoglyph creations were a worldwide phenomenon and occurred in North and South America, Britain, Finland and now Russia, to name a few places. There are many other examples of certain types of ‘technology’ being used in far flung places with people who had no contact with one another, or who supposedly had no contact with one another. What we really have to start understanding is how human consciousness functions. Surely there’s some kind of bizarre shared consciousness occurring in different human groups all over the planet because more often than not we find the same kind of creations occurring during the same time period. That is, when people had similar technologies at their disposal although, as in the case of the elk and the Nazca lines, that could be several thousand years apart.