




DJ Droood wrote:...must have been a wayward Europeans....
Lily wrote:The problem with these finds is usually that they do not transcribe into anything that looks like a gaelic text, and THEN you'd have to demonstrate how the gaelic-speaking folks got there.
They could be other inscriptions or simply knife marks but you probably won't find anything convincing.
Here's another case that has been discussed before (probably fell victim to autoprune)
http://cwva.org/ogam_rebutal/wirtz.html
http://cwva.org/wwvrunes/wwvrunes_3.html
AndyN wrote:Donald Cyr who edited Stonehenge Viewpoint for many years published "Exploring Rock Art" in 1989. It includes several chapters about rock art in Colorado and speculates that a lot of it is ogham script. The same book includes supposed ogham carving from elsewhere in the US. I have to say I'm not really convinced, but there is certainly food for thought in this book.
If you can find a copy it might help you track down the carvings. Locations in Colorado that are mentioned include - Sun Temple mentioned by McGlone and Leonard in "Ancient Celtic America, 1986 - Hidden Spring- Crack Cave - Little Hidden Cave, Hayes Canyon - Anubis Caves.
Art wrote: If you can find some sort of reference we can explore it farther.
, it'll be FUN to casually and briefly hypothesize in a history report a possible ancient Druidic or Gallic traveler into the wilds of North America. 
DJ Droood wrote:There is some stuff on google about the Crack Cave and Anubis Cave in Colorado..I just spent a couple of minutes on it..interesting stuff, although more recent archaeologists seem to dismiss the theory that Europeans were responsible for the markings.......
Lily wrote: THEN you'd have to demonstrate how the gaelic-speaking folks got there.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim_Severin http://www.timseverin.net/biography.html

and he thought the advanced architecture of Mandan villages must have been learned from Europeans
The Madoc legend attained its greatest prominence during the Elizabethan era, when Welsh and English writers used it bolster British claims in the New World versus those of Spain.
Dendrias wrote:That's meant to be apart from the scientific question. If there is sound evidence of European, Arabian or Nephite presence, fine. But where does the need come from?




Dendrias wrote:Do You think so? You're the expert, and as i asked i will believe You. But that's nothing to do with heritage, has it?
The - i fear to say it - german wikipedia mentions DNS evidence from 2006 that proved no Welsh DNS in the Mandan, but doesn't give a source. Do You know anything about that.




It is my hope that the history of the Mandan people can be respected for what it is, I don’t imagine they appreciate their oral history being relegated to second class by a European myth. There have been enough prejudicial theories against Native history: from the foreign builders of Cahokia to Egyptian influence in Maya writing.

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