The Yucatan Hall of Records

The Yucatan Hall of Records

The Yucatan Hall of Records

Ph.D. Vernon Q. Murray / Ph.DVernon QMurray

16,35 €
IVA incluido
Disponible
Editorial:
iUniverse
Año de edición:
2016
Materia
Historia de América
ISBN:
9781532005381
16,35 €
IVA incluido
Disponible

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A thousand years ago the Mayas created a map of the world. At Chichen Itza they built temples to represent the nations of the Western Hemisphere—including a replica of modern day Washington, D.C. Their “Temple of the Bearded Man” stands where the Lincoln Memorial would stand in the future, and their memorial wall of dead soldiers was built where the Vietnam Wall would stand. Their “France” temple describes France’s Gaelic and German invasions, and their tectonic plates show major earthquake zones—including one along the Rio Grande Rift. Uxmal (meaning, “The Future”)—the map of the Eastern Hemisphere—shows Asian men in parkas on “The Great Pyramid” (Mt. Everest), Beijing as the home of fortunetelling, and a major earthquake in Qinghai. Overall, however, the map focuses on America—the United States; and the Mayan “creation myths” describe the creation of America—not the creation of earth. Even “Omeyocan,” the Mayan paradise, sounds suspiciously like, “American.” Did an American space-time traveler trick the Mayas into believing he was a god? Is that why they built the Yucatan Hall of Records?

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