Archaeologists in Israel Discover What Jesus Really Looks Like
A major breakthrough in the Biblical archaeology, which claimed Jesus doesn’t look like as everybody thinks.
Recently, archaeologists from the University of Haifa have found a 1500-year-old painting of Jesus Christ, which is very different from our thinking.
Archaeologists found this 1500-year-old painting in the Negev desert of southern Israel. Art historian Emma Maayan-Fanar is the one who noticed this.
According to archaeologists, the gospel never defined what Jesus Christ looked like. However, Westerners always pictured Jesus Christ as a man with long hair and a beard, which could be just our imagination...
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What do you look when you see a stunning crystal? Maybe your thing is the perfection of the diamond or the vivid colors of the various gems. The fact is that since they first discovered it, people have been fascinated by crystals. The names of the gems come from ancient cultures, which were obsessed with their jewelry, kitchenware, and weapons.
Do you know that even the Bible describes the new Jerusalem after the apocalypse built all in gems and crystals?
An archeological excavation in Spain reveals that even in the 3rd millennium BC, crystals were an object of fascination and ritual.
Archeologists discovered a number of shrouds decorated with amber beads at the Valencina de la Concepción site, and they also found a "remarkable set of "crystal weapons
The Monterilio tholos, excavated between 2007 and 2010, is "a great megalithic construction…which extends over 43.75 m in total." It has been constructed out of large slabs of slate and served as a burial site.
The period in which this site was built was well known for the excavation of metals from the ground, and where there is excavation – there can also be crystals.
In the case with the Monterilio tholos, the people there found a way to shape the quartz crystals into weapons.
However, the spot where these crystals were uncovered is not associated with rock crystal deposits, so it means that these crystals were imported from somewhere else.
The rock crystal source used in creating these weapons has not been pinpointed, but two potential sources have been suggested, "both located several kilometers away from Valencia."
As the academic paper which focuses on these crystal weapons states, the manufacture of the crystal dagger "must have been based on the accumulation of transmitted empirical knowledge and skill taken from the production of flint dagger blades as well from the know-how of rock-crystal smaller foliaceous bifacial objects, such as Ontiveros and Monterilio arrowheads."
The exact number of ‘crystal weapons’ found in the site has been estimated to "10 crystal arrowheads, 4 blades and the rock crystal core of the Monterilio tholos."
Interestingly enough, although the bones of 20 individuals were found in the main chamber, none of the crystal weapons can be ascribed to them.
The individuals had been buried with flint daggers, ivory, beads, and other items, but the crystal weapons were kept in separate chambers.
These crystal weapons could have had ritualistic significance and were most probably kept for the elite. Their use was perhaps closely connected to the spiritual significance they possessed. Indeed, many civilizations have found crystals as having a highly spiritual and symbolic significance.
The paper states that they probably represent funerary paraphernalia only accessible to the elite of this time period.
The association of the dagger blade to a handle made of ivory, also a non-local raw material that must have been of great value, strongly suggests the high-ranking status of the people making use of such objects."
Teotihuacán was the massive pre-Aztec metropolis that was home to 125,000 people around 400 CE. The remains of the city still stand about 30 miles northeast of Mexico City and it is a popular tourist destination. While the site continues to be studied by archeologists it was largely believed to have given up all of its secrets. That all changed one rainy day in 2003.
The city was established around 100 BCE and lasted until 750 CE. It was the largest city in the region, and the sixth largest city in the world. It was a religious center and was known for its Mesoamerican pyramids and it’s complex, multi-family residential compounds. Those who knew the city best truly believed that they knew all there was to be explored there, and that there was nothing to be found underneath the Temple of the Plumed Serpent.
But then came a rainstorm in 2003 that turned the entire city into muck and created one very large sinkhole at the base of the Temple of the Plumed Serpent. Archaeologist Sergio Gómez was the first to see the sinkhole and wonder how they would be able to fix it. But then as he took a flashlight to get a closer look he realized that there was much more to the sinkhole than met the eye. Having spent 30 years studying Teotihuacán, Gómez was not about to let any part of the city escape his examination. With a rope tied around his waist and several of his colleagues looked on he descended into the hole.
When he reached the bottom of the hole he found himself in the middle of a tunnel. Gómez was able to see some of the ceiling, but the tunnel was blocked off in both directions by large stones. Knowing the city as well as he did, Gómez was aware that there was a tunnel that ran under another pyramid in the complex, the Temple of the Sun. Gómez believed that he may have found a similar tunnel, a mirror tunnel underneath the Temple of the Plumed Serpent. If he was correct, it was a discovery that could make his career.
But in order to explore further he would need to prove his theory. He got the help of the National Institute of Anthropology and History and they provided a ground penetrating radar device. This would give Gómez the proof he needed to be able to excavate further into the tunnel system. Starting in early 2004, he began to work on creating a digital map of whatever was underneath the pyramid. By 2005, the digital map was done and Gómez had the proof he needed.
It turned out that he had fallen into the tunnel a few yards past the actual entrance. The tunnel spanned 330 feet right to the center of the pyramid. The actual entrance to the tunnel was sealed with massive boulders and from the efforts made by the builders, it was clear to Gómez that the tunnel was never meant to be opened. The sealed tunnel was a substantial find for two reasons. The first was that the efforts made to seal the tunnel could mean that there was something very significant hidden within. The second was that the tunnel underneath the Temple of the Sun had fallen prey to looters before being explored by archaeologists in the 1990s. Whatever was hidden underneath the Temple of the Plumed Serpent had not been touched in 1,800 years.
In 2009, Gómez finally got permission to dig, and what he found remains as one of the greatest discoveries in Mexican history.
For many years, the discovery of some underwater pyramids found next to the coast of Japan has been thought to be false until more recent expeditions at the bottom of the Pacific ocean. Although the discovery was made in 1986 while a tourist business representative was scuba diving, the presence of the Japanese pyramids was only officially confirmed in 1995, when an in-depth investigation had just begun and was not yet complete. The fact that the pyramids are thirty meters under the surface off the island of Okinawa is one of the reasons why the inquiry has taken so long.
Since the location was founded in 1987, a collection of intriguing pyramid-like formations have captured the attention of geologists and divers off the coast of Japan’s Ryukyu Islands.
The preliminary excavations were demoralizing. But in the summer of 1996, "the great discovery" would be made: a massive angular platform 72 meters long that was found in the middle of a complex structuremade up of wide and straight "streets," steps, pillars, and enormous stone blocks that were "all united in an unprecedented architecture," as Japanese archaeologists put it.
The discovery’s primary focus, however, was on determining the "age" of the pyramids. The team’s geologist leader, Professor Masaki Kimura, stated that the pyramids are "thousands of years old" a few months after the initial digs. However, the earliest evidence of a human civilization found in Japan dates to the Neolithic, or around 9,000 years ago, and the people who lived during that period were hunters.
The Publication Ancient America remarked in 1997 that: