Path-Finder
ELITE MEMBER
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2013
- Messages
- 24,393
- Reaction score
- 1
- Country
- Location
Well, hmmn. Immigrants from Anatolia made Stonehenge!! Bloody foreigners.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Don't tell anyone but it was the darkiesCrazy, i though it was built by the druids, a pre-historic people who lived on the isles. Anatolia!?
So, the vedas came to indus. Some went back to Europe and erected Stonehenge??They were probably Indians. Vedic books will now need upgrading to include this.
Don't tell anyone but it was the darkies
This will hit the bigots the hardest, not the first time darkies have been to blightyhow are people going to react to this? they would probably keep it hush
So the English are now Turks.how are people going to react to this? they would probably keep it hush
So the English are now Turks.
Anatolians than and them now are much different.So the English are now Turks.
It's already known that Middle Eastern farmers colonized most of Europe. Indo-Europeans from the Steppes will later invade alot of Europe.
I am more interested in how and why rather than who built it.
I am more interested in how and why rather than who built it.
It was Pagan for rituals.Yep well known fact.
Plenty of evidence for it;
https://www.sciencenews.org/article/dna-mating-asian-herders-european-farmers
A majority of Yamnaya ancestry came from Caucasus-based hunter-gatherers and a minority of Yamnaya ancestry — between 10 and 18 percent — was inherited from eastern European farmers, the scientists estimate. Those farmers may have belonged to Europe’s more than 5,000-year-old Globular Amphora Culture, named for its globe-shaped pottery.
Scientists analysed DNA from the 8,000 year-old remains of early farmers found at an ancient graveyard in Germany.
They compared the genetic signatures to those of modern populations and found similarities with the DNA of people living in today's Turkey and Iraq.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-11729813
It looked nice at the time, still looks nice now.