Author Archives: Carol Chapman
Author Archives: Carol Chapman
As we enter 2012, and wonder about the Mayan prophecies: Are they about the end of the world, a new beginning, or what? Here’s some information about super-volcanoes:
Continue readingEach of the world’s roughly one dozen super-volcanoes is capable of spewing out thousands of times more magma and ash than any eruption ever recorded in human history.
Can scientists predict volcanic eruptions? Mythical Atlantis may hold the answer.
I’m on Facebook now. Here’s the link to my page. If it’s responsive to you, I would appreciate that you would “like” it. Thanks so much. Carol http://www.facebook.com/pages/
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They were looking for vintage champagne bottles from a wreck … and they found them. But they found more. This CNN video shows images of a mysterious object found 80 meters underwater by team led by Peter Lindberg.
Continue reading“We had been out for nine days and we were quite tired and we were on our way home, but we made a final run with a sonar fish and suddenly this thing turned up,” he continued.
I have been doing this for nearly 20 years so I have a seen a few objects on the bottom, but nothing like this
Peter Lindberg, team leader Ocean Explorer.Using side-scan sonar, the team found a 60-meter diameter cylinder-shaped object, with a rigid tail 400 meters long.
Today I’m working on the 2012 and Beyond Movie. When I was in Yucatan in December 2011, I met with Kristine Ellingson, author of Tales from the Yucatan Jungle: Life in a Mayan Village. She’s an American who is married to a Mayan man and has been living in a Mayan village with him for 20 years. During my visit in Yucatan, I interviewed her for the movie asking her what the Maya in her village think about 2012–are they afraid of the end of the world? Do they even know about it?
Kristine’s intriguing memoir is available on Amazon in both paperback and Kindle form, and on BarnesandNoble.com or by order from Barnes and Noble bookstores.
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Going by the distribution of people with ABO blood types, it appears that the indigenous peoples of the Americas–North, South, and Central–could not be descended from Asian people who crossed the Bering Land Bridge during the Ice Age. Indigenous Americans are universally Blood Type O and Asians are for the most part Blood Type B, with very few Os. However, a new blood typing method first discovered in 1955 corroborates the Bering Land Bridge hypothesis. The ABO Blood typing system was discovered in 1900 and 1901, and relates to many other primates as well as humans.
As first glance, the distribution of people throughout the world by ABO Blood type did not seem to support a Bering Land Bridge influx of Blood Type O people, and therefore, could have meant that native Americans originally came from a now sunken lost continent in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, which some believe was called Mu or Lemuria.
A new blood typing system is called Diego “comprises 21 rare blood factors,” according to a Wikipedia article entitled, Diego Antigen System., and it supports the Bering Land Bridge theory:
Diego antigens are only found (or in some cases, only not found) in populations of Aboriginal Americans (in both North and South America) and the Mongolic peoples of East, Southeast, North-Central and Northeast Asia. Incidence of the factors is not diminished in ethnically mixed populations. Indeed, the first two Diego factors were found in people of mixed European and Aboriginal American ancestry.
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The world maps of ABO Blood Type distribution in the world on the Contactee Blood Types Study by ICAR website shows the incidence of the A, B, and O blood types in indigenous populations.
For example, do you know that the indigenous peoples of Central and South America are entirely Blood Type O? But there are hardly any Type Os in Eastern Asia. Therefore, it does not seem logical than the people of Central and South America could be descended from the those of Eastern Asia who crossed the Bering land bridge during the Ice Ages. Could this mean that, as some mystics and psychics proclaim, that First Nations people on the west coast of North America actually come from Lemuria?
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A couple of days ago, I made a number of posts about blood type and likelihood of having been contacted by extraterrestrials. Naturally, this led to exploring more information on blood types.
Do you know that in Japan and Korea, there is a fascination with dating by blood type? Certain ABO blood types are supposed to make better mates from certain blood types than others.
The Great Geek Manual says that:
In Japan, a person’s blood type or ketsu eki gata is a popularly used to determine a person’s temperament, much the way Americans use astrological signs. The difference is that the Japanese take blood types very seriously. Japanese dating services use blood types to make matches. Employers use them to evaluate job applicants. High school students exchange blood types by way of introduction. Sports card include athletes’ blood types prominently alongside more traditional sports statistics.
In When We Were Gods, I write about an encounter with another bald eagle, years ago. This bald eagle was hidden in mist right beside me. I didn’t know what was making all the noise in the mist until the eagle rose in front of my face carrying a snake in its talons.
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Today, a bald eagle flew–no, soared–right over my head. If you’ve read When We Were Gods, my book about past life memories of the lost city of Atlantis, you’ll know why the eagle’s fly-by was especially important and exciting for me.
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Even if you are not interested the distribution of alien contactees among various ABO blood types, you may, like me, find the Contactee Blood Types Study by ICAR website interesting. It has marvelous maps showing the original distribution of people by blood type throughout the world. It’s worth taking a look.
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