Nov25 Written by:admin
Sunday, November 25, 2007
An evaluation on a “Carboniferous human calvarium fossil”
Abstract
The author has examined through microscopes more than 20 thin sections cut from “rocks” that Mr. Ed Conrad discovered and sent to the author (Fig. 1). Without exception, they are all found to be fossils, including the subject “calvarium fossil” (Fig. 2). The object is a Carboniferous human calvarium fossil for the following reasons: (1) it contains numerous remains of blood vessels and red blood cells in each specimen and thin section ; (2) it contains remains of dendrites and somas of brain cells; (3) No other animal has an organ or body part that matches its inner/outer shape and size; (4) Its inner cavity has a capacity of at least 1,025 cc.; (5) It was found between coal veins near Mahanoy, Pennsylvania, where geological structure has been dated to be around 300 million years old. The fossil’s blood vessels have turned into coal, suggesting it once existed in a coal region. Even if it had not come from the Carboniferous age, the fact that it is fossilized and coalified would have still made it the oldest human skull cap ever found in the world. In addition to the subject fossil, there are at least four other pieces of evidence for human civilization in the Carboniferous age. Mankind needs no more than 8,000 years to develop from a low-technology society to a high-technology society.
Introduction
A “calvarium fossil” (Fig. 3), discovered and owned by Mr. Ed Conrad of Shenandoah, Pennsylvania, U.S.A., has been considered for over ten years to be just a rock, while its owner keeps maintaining that it is a Carboniferous human calvarium fossil. This article attempts to evaluate the object by answering the following questions in this article’s Discussion section:
1. Is it a fossil?
2. Is it a calvarium fossil?
3. Is it a human calvarium fossil?
4 Is it a Carboniferous human calvarium fossil?
5. Are there evidences for human civilization in the Carboniferous age?
6.Was there high-technology civilization in the Carboniferous age?
7. Further discussion/Attempts to disprove myself
7-1 Couldn’t it be a rock?
7-2 Couldn’t it be something other than a calvarium?
7-3 Couldn’t it be a non-human calvarium?
7-4 Couldn’t it be later than the Carboniferous age?
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