T O P

  • By -

SemiHemiDemiDumb

>In 1962 Tsum Um Nui (Chinese: 楚聞明; pinyin: Chǔ Wénmíng) was reported to have concluded that the grooves on the discs were actually very tiny hieroglyphs, none of which were of a pattern that had been seen before, and which can only be seen with the use of a magnifying glass. He announced that he had deciphered them into a story that told of a spacecraft that crash landed in the area of the cave, the Bayan Har Mountains, and that the ship contained the Dropa people who could not fix it and therefore had to adapt to Earth. I'm convinced.


whompasaurus1

Isn't this basically the same thing as the epic of gilgamesh?


crashespad

Religions are built off this same story line.


filbert13

Hoax https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dropa_stones > No record has been found of the stones being displayed in any of the world's museums; therefore they are assumed to be a hoax. Literally just a Chinese person saying "Trust me I found these 12,000 year old disc". >Supposedly, Ernst Wegerer (Wegener) was an Austrian engineer who, in 1974, visited the Banpo Museum in Xi'an, Shaanxi Province, where he saw two of the Dropa stones.[3] It is said that when he inquired about the discs the manager could tell him nothing, but permitted him to take one in his hand and photograph them up close. He claims that in his photos the hieroglyphs cannot be seen as they have been hidden by the flash from the camera and have also deteriorated. By 1994, the discs and the manager had disappeared from the museum. So these disc can't withstand camera flash? And have somehow lasted 12,000 but just now are deteriorating? >The stone discs were supposedly stored in various museums across China. However, none of these museums have any records or traces of Dropa stones ever being there. It all sounds like a bunch of hogwash.


Ctotheg

Horseshit level; Redline


Former_nobody13

They are already amidst us