New theories regarding the extraterrestrial visitation to earth have been inspired by the discovery of a skeleton at the Russian Stonehenge site. UFO enthusiasts hastened to assert that photos of the remains were evidence that aliens had once visited Earth when they were first published.
On a location referred regarded as Russia’s Stonehenge, a skeleton with an unusually formed skull (seen in the picture) was discovered. When it was originally discovered, UFO enthusiasts immediately asserted it was evidence that aliens had visited earth.
However, investigators discovered that the bones belonged to a lady who lived approximately 2,000 years ago and had a long-skulled according to tribal tradition.
The ruins of this hamlet, which are about 4,000 years old, were discovered in Arkaim, a town in Central Russia close to Chelyabinsk. The woman was thought to be a member of a tribe that once lived in what is now known as modern-day Ukraine.
According to researcher Maria Makurova, “We have uncovered a well-preserved skeleton,” according to the Russian news agency TASS.
The woman’s skull appears extended, according to researcher Maria Makurova, since the tribe traditionally bent the shape of their children’s skulls by tying rope over their heads. They display the skeleton.
“I wouldn’t rule out the idea that the skeleton belonged to a woman from the Sarmati tribe, which was once present in the regions of what are now southern Russia, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine.
‘Her skull was elongated because the tribe did so by tying up the heads of their children with rope. It was clearly a tradition in the tribe.’
Archaeologists have revealed that the bones belong to a woman who lived around 6,000 years ago and had an elongated skull because it was bound out of tribal tradition
She declined to comment on speculation it was attributed to alien visitors saying that currently they were still working on theories as to why the tribe had the tradition but had nothing fixed yet as a reason.
The skeleton is thought to date to the second or third century AD, making it considerably younger than the site.
It is just another of the mysteries to be unearthed at the spectacular site of Arkaim known as Russia’s Stonehenge, which is believed to have been built in the 17th century BC.
It is believed by some that, like its 5,000-year-old English counterpart, it was used to study of the stars.
But Arkaim is thought to be more advanced.
Stonehenge allows for observations of 10 astronomical phenomena using 22 elements, while Arkaim enables observations of 18 phenomena using 30 elements.
The remains were found in Arkaim (shown with a red marker) near Chelyabinsk in central Russia. The site is generally dated to the 17th century BC, although some experts think it could have been created in the 20th century BC
This means that ancient people could have observed and tracked certain events in the sky by using the site in certain ways from particular positions, and that Arkaim offered more observable events than Stonehenge.
Russian archaeologist K.K. Bystrushkin, who made the comparison between the two sites in 2003, said Stonehenge offers an observational accuracy of 10-arc minutes to a degree, whereas Arkaim offers accuracy of one-arc minute.
This precision was unheard of at the time the monument is thought to have been built.
It is just another of the mysteries to be unearthed at the spectacular site of Arkaim known as Russia’s Stonehenge. It is believed by some that, like its English counterpart, it was used to study of the stars, but Arkaim is thought to be more advanced. Stone circles found near the site are shown
The Akraim archaeological site was discovered in 1987 and since then it has yielded spectacular discoveries including some artefacts from the Bronze Age.
As well as being a primitive astronomical observatory it was also a village that was fortified by two large stone circular walls.
The settlement covers an area of some 220,000 square feet (20,439 square metres) and consists of two circles of dwellings separated by a street, with a central community square in the centre.
Source: us.pahilopahilonews.com