Ural Writings - Echoes Of Aliens - Alternative View

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Ural Writings - Echoes Of Aliens - Alternative View
Ural Writings - Echoes Of Aliens - Alternative View

Video: Ural Writings - Echoes Of Aliens - Alternative View

Video: Ural Writings - Echoes Of Aliens - Alternative View
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Ural writings echoes of alien visits

In the Urals, along the banks of the rivers Tagil, Neiva, Rezha, Yuryuzan, one can see "scribes" - drawings applied to stones with ocher, mixed, as it is assumed, with blood. The color of the images is different: from light tones to red-violet and brown. And the thickness of the lines is different - from 10 to 20 mm.

The drawings were made, according to archaeologists, 4-5 thousand years ago. Some scientists took these images for unknown letters, others for mysterious signs. And they always aroused interest.

The existence of rock paintings in the Urals was known for a long time - Tsar Peter I back in 1699 instructed the clerk of the order chamber, Yakov Losev, to go to those lands, find a mountain with drawings and copy them "word for word, nothing different and everything would be similar."

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Already in our time they have been described and classified in the two-volume work of the archaeologist VN Chernetsov "Rock carvings of the Urals". Archaeologists decided that the drawings depict hunting structures and devices of the ancient Ugrians and Mansi - hedges, corrals, etc. Indeed, one of the drawings shows a man next to a ring-shaped structure into which a wild animal is driven.

Hunting scenes can be guessed in many other drawings, but not in all. Many human figures are depicted as if separately from others, on their own. To the question of what they represent, archaeologists do not give a clear answer.

Vladimir Ivanovich Avinsky, Candidate of Geological and Mineralogical Sciences, is firmly convinced that representatives of cosmic civilizations have visited our planet in the past. In his opinion, the Ural writings are nothing more than drawings of the structure … of chemicals (!). Every high school student knows these formulas, similar to the chains and polygons used in organic chemistry.

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And in fact: here are zigzag figures with branches - drawings on the rocks near the Neiva and Tagil rivers. What are these fishing nets? But even archaeologists doubt this. "There is no direct evidence of the connection of the figures with fishing," writes Chernetsov, "especially since images of fish have never been found in the scribes." But the mysterious chains are very similar to the formulas of the well-known polyethylene!

And here is another figure - a drawing on the Borodino rocks on the Rezh River. The drawing resembles a honeycomb. True, the honeycombs of bees are regular hexagons, but here they are elongated. And the ancient people did not depict the bees themselves. Archaeologists cannot explain the meaning of the drawing. Avinsky, however, saw in the "honeycomb" a chemical formula depicting … the structure of graphite!

Finally, another rock art in the form of a half-ring with appendages is similar to the structural chemical formula of an antibiotic!

A Stone Age man could not have known the symbols of organic chemistry. “Yes, he had no need for them,” Avinsky wrote. “And yet the rock paintings of the Urals are strongly associated with modern chemical symbols: among the scribbles one can find scraps of hydrocarbon chains, elongated hexagons of benzene rings.”

The scientist put forward a bold hypothesis that chemical formulas could have been transmitted to ancient people by space aliens who once visited Earth. "If the similarity of the 'stone formulas' with the structure of chemical compounds turns out to be a fact," Avinsky wrote, "then would it not be possible to consider the writings as part of the scientific baggage that somehow became the subject of the cult of the ancient inhabitants of the Earth?"

VI Avinsky showed rock paintings to physicists and chemists, and many of them agreed that they are very similar to chemical formulas.

Gennady CHERNENKO, "UFO" No. 1-2 (166), 2001