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			6 -
			EVIDENCE FOR ADVANCED CULTURE IN DISTANT AGES 
				
					
						
						
						Artifacts from 
						Aix-en-Provence, France 
						
						Letters in Marble Block, 
						Philadelphia 
						
						Nail in Devonian Sandstone, 
						Scotland 
						
						Gold Thread in Carboniferous 
						Stone, England 
						
						Metallic Vase from 
						Precambrian Rock at Dorchester, Mass 
						
						A Tertiary Chalk Ball from Laon, 
						France 
						
						Objects from Illinois Well 
						Boring 
						
						A Clay Image from Nampa, 
						Idaho 
						
						Gold Chain in Carboniferous 
						Coal from Morrisonville, Illinois 
						
						Carved Stone from Lehigh 
						Coal Mine near Webster, Iowa 
						
						Iron Cup from Oklahoma Coal Mine 
						
						
						A Shoe Sole from Nevada 
						
						
						Block Wall in an Oklahoma 
						Mine 
						
						Metallic Tubes from Chalk in 
						France 
						
						Shoe Print in Shale from 
						Utah 
						
						Grooved Sphere from South 
						Africa  
			  
			Up to this point, most of the evidence we have considered gives the 
			impression that even if humans did exist in the distant past, they 
			remained at a somewhat primitive level of cultural and technological 
			achievement. One might well ask the following question. If humans 
			had a long time to perfect their skills, then why do we not find 
			ancient artifacts indicative of an advancing civilization? 
			In 1863, Charles Lyell expressed this doubt in his book Antiquity of 
			Man:
 
				
				"instead of the rudest pottery or flint tools. . . . we should 
			now be finding sculptured forms, surpassing in beauty the 
			masterpieces of Phidias or Praxiteles; lines of buried railways or 
			electric telegraphs, from which the best engineers of our day might 
			gain invaluable hints; astronomical instruments and microscopes of 
			more advanced construction than any known in Europe, and other 
			indications of perfection in the arts and sciences." 
				 
			The following 
			reports do not quite measure up to this standard, but some of the 
			objects described do give hints of unexpected accomplishments. 
			Not only are some of the objects decidedly more advanced than stone 
			tools, but many also occur in geological contexts far older than we 
			have thus far considered.
 
			The reports of this extraordinary evidence emanate, with some 
			exceptions, from nonscientific sources. And often the artifacts 
			themselves, not having been preserved in standard natural history 
			museums, are impossible to locate.
 
			We ourselves are not sure how much importance should be given to 
			this highly anomalous evidence. But we include it for the sake of 
			completeness and to encourage further study.
 
			In this chapter, we have included only a sample of the published 
			material available to us. And given the spotty reporting and 
			infrequent preservation of these highly anomalous discoveries, it is 
			likely that the entire body of reports now existing represents only 
			a small fraction of the total number of such discoveries made over 
			the past few centuries.
 
 
			
			ARTIFACTS FROM AIX-EN-PROVENCE, FRANCE
 In his book Mineralogy, Count Bournon recorded an intriguing 
			discovery that had been made by French workmen in the latter part of 
			the eighteenth century.
 
			  
			In his description of the details about the 
			discovery, Bournon wrote:  
				
				"During the years 1786, 1787, and 1788, 
			they were occupied near Aix-en-Provence, in France, in quarrying 
			stone for the rebuilding, upon a vast scale, of the Palace of 
			Justice. The stone was a limestone of deep grey, and of that kind 
			which are tender when they come out of the quarry, but harden by 
			exposure to the air. The strata were separated from one another by a 
			bed of sand mixed with clay, more or less calcareous. The first 
			which were wrought presented no appearance of any foreign bodies, 
			but, after the workmen had removed the ten first beds, they were 
			astonished, when taking away the eleventh, to find its inferior 
			surface, at the depth of forty or fifty feet, covered with shells. 
				   
				The stone of this bed having been removed, as they were taking away 
			a stratum of argillaceous sand, which separated the eleventh bed 
			from the twelfth, they found stumps of columns and fragments of 
			stone half wrought, and the stone was exactly similar to that of the 
			quarry: they found moreover coins, handles of hammers, and other 
			tools or fragments of tools in wood. But that which principally 
			commanded their attention, was a board about one inch thick and 
			seven or eight feet long; it was broken into many pieces, of which 
			none were missing, and it was possible to join them again one to 
			another, and to restore to the board or plate its original form, 
			which was that of the boards of the same kind used by the masons and 
			quarry men: it was worn in the same manner, rounded and waving upon 
			the edges." 
			Count Bournon, continuing his description, stated:  
				
				"The stones which 
			were completely or partly wrought, had not at all changed in their 
			nature, but the fragments of the board, and the instruments, and 
			pieces of instruments of wood, had been changed into agate, which 
			was very fine and agreeably colored. Here then, we have the traces 
			of a work executed by the hand of man, placed at a depth of fifty 
			feet, and covered with eleven beds of compact limestone: every thing 
			tended to prove that this work had been executed upon the spot where 
			the traces existed. The presence of man had then preceded the 
			formation of this stone, and that very considerably since he was 
			already arrived at such a degree of civilization that the arts were 
			known to him, and that he wrought the stone and formed columns out 
			of it."  
			These passages appeared in the American Journal of Science 
			in 1820; today, however, it is unlikely such a report would be found 
			in the pages of a scientific journal. Scientists simply do not take 
			such discoveries seriously.
 
			
			LETTERS IN MARBLE BLOCK, PHILADELPHIA
 In 1830, letter-like shapes were discovered within a solid block of 
			marble from a quarry 12 miles northwest of Philadelphia. The marble 
			block was taken from a depth of 60-70 feet. This was reported in the 
			American Journal of Science in 1831. The quarry workers removed 
			layers of gneiss, mica slate, hornblende, talcose slate, and 
			primitive clay slate before coming to the layer from which the block 
			containing the letter-like shapes was cut.
 
			 
			While they were sawing through the block, the workmen happened to 
			notice a rectangular indentation, about 1.5 inches wide by .625 
			inches high, displaying two raised characters. Several respectable 
			gentlemen from nearby Norristown, Pennsylvania, were called to the 
			scene and inspected the object. It is hard to explain the formation 
			of the characters as products of natural physical processes. This 
			suggests the characters were made by intelligent humans from the 
			distant past.
 
			
			NAIL IN DEVONIAN SANDSTONE, SCOTLAND
 In 1844, Sir David Brewster reported that a nail had been discovered 
			firmly embedded in a block of sandstone from the Kingoodie 
			(Mylnfield) Quarry in Scotland. Dr. A. W. Medd of the British 
			Geological Survey wrote to us in 1985 that this sandstone is of 
			"Lower Old Red Sandstone age" (Devonian, between 360 and 408 million 
			years old). Brewster was a famous Scottish physicist. He was a 
			founder of the British Association for the Advancement of Science 
			and made important discoveries in the field of optics.
 
			In his report to the British Association for the Advancement of 
			Science, Brewster stated:
 
				
				"The stone in Kingoodie quarry consists of 
			alternate layers of hard stone and a soft clayey substance called 
			'till'; the courses of stone vary from six inches to upwards of six 
			feet in thickness. The particular block in which the nail was found, 
			was nine inches thick, and in proceeding to clear the rough block 
			for dressing, the point of the nail was found projecting about half 
			an inch (quite eaten with rust) into the 'till,' the rest of the 
			nail lying along the surface of the stone to within an inch of the 
			head, which went right down into the body of the stone." 
				 
			The fact 
			that the head of the nail was buried in the sandstone block would 
			seem to rule out the possibility the nail had been pounded into the 
			block after it was quarried.
 
			
			GOLD THREAD IN CARBONIFEROUS STONE, ENGLAND
 On June 22, 1844, this curious report appeared in the London Times:
 
				
				"A few days ago, as some workmen were employed in quarrying a rock 
			close to the Tweed about a quarter of a mile below Rutherford-mill, 
			a gold thread was discovered embedded in the stone at a depth of 
			eight feet."  
			Dr. A. W. Medd of the British Geological Survey wrote 
			to us in 1985 that this stone is of Early Carboniferous age (between 
			320 and 360 million years old).
 
			
			METALLIC VASE FROM PRECAMBRIAN ROCK AT DORCHESTER, MASSACHUSETTS
 The following report, titled "A Relic of a Bygone Age," appeared in 
			the magazine Scientific American (June 5, 1852):
 
				
				"A few days ago a 
			powerful blast was made in the rock at Meeting House Hill, in 
			Dorchester, a few rods south of Rev. Mr. Hall's meeting house. The 
			blast threw out an immense mass of rock, some of the pieces weighing 
			several tons, and scattered fragments in all directions. Among them 
			was picked up a metallic vessel in two parts, rent asunder by the 
			explosion. On putting the two parts together it formed a bell-shaped 
			vessel, 4-1/2 inches high, 6-1/2 inches at the base, 2-1/2 inches at 
			the top, and about an eighth of an inch in thickness. The body of 
			this vessel resembles zinc in color, or a composition metal, in 
			which there is a considerable portion of silver. On the side there 
			are six figures or a flower, or bouquet, beautifully inlaid with 
			pure silver, and around the lower part of the vessel a vine, or 
			wreath, also inlaid with silver.    
				The chasing, carving, and inlaying 
			are exquisitely done by the art of some cunning workman. This 
			curious and unknown vessel was blown out of the solid pudding stone, 
			fifteen feet below the surface. It is now in the possession of Mr. 
				John Kettell. Dr. J. V. C. Smith, who has recently traveled in the 
			East, and examined hundreds of curious domestic utensils, and has 
			drawings of them, has never seen anything resembling this. He has 
			taken a drawing and accurate dimensions of it, to be submitted to 
			the scientific. There is not doubt but that this curiosity was blown 
			out of the rock, as above stated; but will Professor Agassiz, or 
			some other scientific man please to tell us how it came there? The 
			matter is worthy of investigation, as there is no deception in the 
			case." 
			The editors of Scientific American ironically remarked:  
				
				"The above 
			is from the Boston Transcript and the wonder is to us, how the 
			Transcript can suppose Prof. Agassiz qualified to tell how it got 
			there any more than John Doyle, the blacksmith. This is not a 
			question of zoology, botany, or geology, but one relating to an 
			antique metal vessel perhaps made by Tubal Cain, the first 
			inhabitant of Dorchester." 
			According to a recent U.S. Geological Survey map of the 
			Boston-Dorchester area, the pudding stone, now called the Roxbury 
			conglomerate, is of Precambrian age, over 600 million years old. By 
			standard accounts, life was just beginning to form on this planet 
			during the Precambrian. But in the Dorchester vessel we have 
			evidence indicating the presence of artistic metalworkers in North 
			America over 600 million years before Leif Erikson.
 
			
			A TERTIARY CHALK BALL FROM LAON, FRANCE
 The April 1862 edition of The Geologist included an English 
			translation of an intriguing report by Maximilien Melleville, the 
			vice president of the Academic Society of Laon, France. In his 
			report, Melleville described a round chalk ball discovered 75 meters 
			(about 246 feet) below the surface in early Tertiary lignite beds 
			near Laon.
 
			Lignite (sometimes called ash) is a soft brown coal. The lignite 
			beds at Montaigu, near Laon, lie at the base of a hill and were 
			mined by horizontal shafts. The main shaft ran 600 meters (about 
			1,969 feet) into a bed of lignite.
 
			In August of 1861, workmen digging at the far end of the shaft, 225 
			feet below the surface of the hill, saw a round object fall down 
			from the top of the excavation. The object was about 6 centimeters 
			(2.36 inches) in diameter and weighed 310 grams (about 11 ounces).
 
			Melleville stated:
 
				
				"They looked to see exactly what place in the 
			strata it had occupied, and they are able to state that it did not 
			come from the interior of the 'ash,' but that it was imbedded at its 
			point of contact with the roof of the quarry, where it had left its 
			impression indented."  
			The workmen carried the chalk ball to a Dr. Lejeune, who informed Melleville. 
			Melleville then stated:
 
				
				"Long before this discovery, the workmen of 
			the quarry had told me they had many times found pieces of wood 
			changed into stone. . . . bearing the marks of human work. I regret 
			greatly now not having asked to see these, but I did not hitherto 
			believe in the possibility of such a fact." 
			According to Melleville, there was no possibility that the chalk 
			ball was a forgery:  
				
				"It really is penetrated over four-fifths of its 
			height by a black bituminous color that merges toward the top into a 
			yellow circle, and which is evidently due to the contact of the 
			lignite in which it had been for so long a time plunged. The upper 
			part, which was in contact with the shell bed, on the contrary has 
			preserved its natural color—the dull white of the chalk. . . . As to 
			the rock in which it was found, I can affirm that it is perfectly 
			virgin, and presents no trace whatever of any ancient exploitation. 
			The roof of the quarry was equally intact in this place, and one 
			could see there neither fissure nor any other cavity by which we 
			might suppose this ball could have dropped down from above." 
			Regarding human manufacture of the chalk object, Melleville was 
			cautious. He wrote:  
				
				"from one fact, even so well established, I do 
			not pretend to draw the extreme conclusion that man was contemporary 
			with the lignites of the Paris basin. . . . My sole object in 
			writing this notice is to make known a discovery as curious as 
			strange, whatever may be its bearing, without pretending to any mode 
			of explanation. I content myself with giving it to science, and I 
			shall wait before forming an opinion in this respect, for further 
			discoveries to furnish me with the means of appreciating the value 
			of this at Montaigu." 
			Geology's editors wrote:  
				
				"We consider his resolution wise in 
			hesitating to date back the age of man to the lower Tertiary period 
			of the Paris basin without further confirmatory evidence."
				 
			In 1883, 
			Gabriel de Mortillet suggested that a piece of white chalk was 
			rolled in the waves of the incoming Tertiary seas and after it 
			became round was left where it was found. 
			This does not, however, seem to be a likely explanation. First of 
			all, the ball had features inconsistent with the action of waves. 
			Melleville reported:
 
				
				"Three great splinters with sharp angles, 
			announce also that it had remained during the working attached to 
			the block of stone out of which it was made, and that it had been 
			separated only after it was finished, by a blow, to which this kind 
			of fracture is due."  
			If wave action is accepted as the explanation 
			of the general roundness of the object, this action should also have 
			smoothed the sharp edges described by Melleville. Furthermore, it is 
			likely that sustained exposure to waves would have disintegrated a 
			piece of chalk. 
			De Mortillet stated that the ball was found in an Early Eocene 
			stratum. If humans made the ball, they must have been in France 
			45-55 million years ago. As extraordinary as this might seem to 
			those attached to the standard evolutionary views, it is in keeping 
			with the evidence considered in this book.
 
 
			
			OBJECTS FROM ILLINOIS WELL BORING
 In 1871, William E. Dubois of the Smithsonian Institution reported 
			on several man-made objects found at deep levels in Illinois. The 
			first object was a copper quasi-coin from Lawn Ridge, in Marshall 
			County, Illinois. In a letter to the Smithsonian Institution, J. W. Moffit stated that in August 1870 he was drilling a well using a 
			"common ground auger." When Moffit brought the auger up from a depth 
			of 125 feet, he discovered the coin-like object "on the auger."
 
			To get down to 125 feet, Moffit drilled through the following 
			strata: 3 feet of soil; 10 feet of yellow clay; 44 feet of blue 
			clay; 4 feet of clay, sand, and gravel; 19 feet of purple clay; 10 
			feet of brown hard pan; 8.5 feet of green clay; 2 feet of vegetable 
			mould; 2.5 feet of yellow clay; 2 feet of yellow hard pan; and 20.5 
			feet of mixed clay.
 
			 
			In 1881, A. Winchell also described the coin-like object. Winchell 
			quoted a letter by W. H. Wilmot, who listed a sequence of strata 
			slightly different from that given by Moffit. Wilmot reported that 
			the quasi-coin had been discovered in the well boring at a depth of 
			114 feet rather than 125 feet. 
			Using the sequence of strata given by Winchell, the Illinois State 
			Geological Survey gave us an estimate for the age of the deposits at 
			the 114-foot level. They would have formed during the Yarmouthian 
			Interglacial "sometime between 200,000 and 400,000 years ago."
 
			W. E. Dubois said that the shape of the quasi-coin was "polygonal 
			approaching to circular," and that it had crudely portrayed figures 
			and inscriptions on both sides. The inscriptions were in a language 
			that Dubois could not recognize, and the quasi-coin's appearance 
			differed from any known coin.
 
			Dubois concluded that the coin must have been made in a machine 
			shop. Noting its uniform thickness, he said the coin must have 
			"passed through a rolling-mill; and if the ancient Indians had such 
			a contrivance, it must have been prehistoric."
 
			  
			Furthermore, Dubois 
			reported that the coin must have been cut with shears or a chisel 
			and the sharp edges filed down. 
			The quasi coin described above suggests the existence of a 
			civilization at least 200,000 years ago in North America. Yet beings 
			intelligent enough to make and use coins (Homo sapiens sapiens) are 
			generally not thought to have lived much earlier than 100,000 years 
			ago. According to standard views, metal coins were first used in 
			Asia Minor during the eighth century B.C.
 
			Moffit also reported that other artifacts were found in nearby 
			Whiteside County, Illinois. At a depth of 120 feet, workmen 
			discovered,
 
				
				"a large copper ring or ferrule, similar to those used on 
			ship spars at the present time. . . . They also found something 
			fashioned like a boat-hook."  
			Mr. Moffit added:  
				
				"There are numerous 
			instances of relics found at lesser depths. A spear-shaped hatchet, 
			made of iron, was found imbedded in clay at 40 feet; and stone pipes 
			and pottery have been unearthed at depths varying from 10 to 50 feet 
			in many localities."  
			In September 1984, the Illinois State 
			Geological Survey wrote to us that the age of deposits at 120 feet 
			in Whiteside County varies greatly. In some places, one would find 
			at 120 feet deposits only 50,000 years old, while in other places 
			one would find Silurian bedrock 410 million years old.
 
			
			A CLAY IMAGE FROM NAMPA, IDAHO
 A small human image, skillfully formed in clay, was found in 1889 at 
			Nampa, Idaho. The figurine came from the 300-foot level of a well 
			boring.
 
			  
			In 1912, G. F. Wright wrote:  
				
				"The record of the well shows 
			that in reaching the stratum from which the image was brought up 
			they had penetrated first about fifty feet of soil, then about 
			fifteen feet of basalt, and afterwards passed through alternate beds 
			of clay and quicksand. . . . down to a depth of about three hundred 
			feet, when the sand pump began to bring up numerous clay balls, some 
			of them more than two inches in diameter, densely coated with iron 
			oxide. In the lower portion of this stratum there were evidences of 
			a buried land surface, over which there had been a slight 
			accumulation of vegetable mould. It was from this point that the 
			image in question was brought up at a depth of three hundred and 
			twenty feet. A few feet farther down, sand rock was reached." 
			As for the figurine, Wright noted:  
				
				"The image in question is made of 
			the same material as that of the clay balls mentioned, and is about 
			an inch and a half long; and remarkable for the perfection with 
			which it represents the human form. . . . It was a female figure, 
			and had the lifelike lineaments in the parts which were finished 
			that would do credit to the classic centers of art." 
				"Upon showing the object to Professor 
				F. W. Putnam," wrote Wright, 
			"he at once directed attention to the character of the incrustations 
			of iron upon the surface as indicative of a relic of considerable 
			antiquity. There were patches of anhydrous red oxide of iron in 
			protected places upon it, such as could not have been formed upon 
			any fraudulent object. In visiting the locality in 1890 I took 
			special pains, while on the ground, to compare the discoloration of 
			the oxide upon the image with that upon the clay balls still found 
			among the debris which has come from the well, and ascertained it to 
			be as nearly identical as it is possible to be.
   
				These confirmatory 
			evidences, in connection with the very satisfactory character of the 
			evidence furnished by the parties who made the discovery, and 
			confirmed by Mr. G. M. Cumming, of Boston (at that time 
			superintendent of that division of the Oregon Short Line Railroad, 
			and who knew all the parties, and was upon the ground a day or two 
			after the discovery) placed the genuineness of the discovery beyond 
			reasonable doubt. To this evidence is to be added, also, the general 
			conformity of the object to other relics of man which have been 
			found beneath the lava deposits on the Pacific coast. In comparing 
			the figurine one cannot help being struck with its resemblance to 
			numerous 'Aurignacian figurines' found in prehistoric caverns in 
			France, Belgium, and Moravia. Especially is the resemblance striking 
			to that of 'The Venus impudica' from Laugerie-Basse." 
				 
			The Nampa 
			image is also similar to the famous Willendorf Venus, thought to be 
			about 30,000 years old. 
			Wright also examined the borehole to see if the figurine could have 
			slipped down from a higher level. He stated:
 
				
				"To answer objections 
			it will be well to give the facts more fully. The well was six 
			inches in diameter and was tubed with heavy iron tubing, which was 
			driven down, from the top, and screwed together, section by section, 
			as progress was made. Thus it was impossible for anything to work in 
			from the sides. The drill was not used after penetrating the lava 
			deposit near the surface, but the tube was driven down, and the 
			included material brought out from time to time by use of a sand 
			pump." 
			Responding to our inquiries, the United States Geological Survey 
			stated in a letter that the clay layer at a depth of over 300 feet 
			is "probably of the Glenns Ferry Formation, upper Idaho Group, which 
			is generally considered to be of Plio-Pleistocene age." The basalt 
			above the Glenns Ferry formation is considered Middle Pleistocene. 
			Other than Homo sapiens sapiens, no hominid is known to have 
			fashioned works of art like the Nampa figurine. The evidence 
			therefore suggests that humans of the modern type were living in 
			America around 2 million years ago, at the Plio-Pleistocene 
			boundary.
 
			That the Nampa figurine strongly challenges the evolutionary 
			scenario was noted by W. H. Holmes of the Smithsonian Institution. 
			In 1919, Holmes wrote in his Handbook of Aboriginal American 
			Antiquities:
 
				
				"According to Emmons, the formation in which the pump 
			was operating is of late Tertiary or early Quaternary age; and the 
			apparent improbability of the occurrence of a well-modeled human 
			figure in deposits of such great antiquity has led to grave doubt 
			about its authenticity. It is interesting to note that the age of 
			this object, supposing it to be authentic, corresponds with that of 
			the incipient man whose bones were, in 1892, recovered by Dubois 
			from the late Tertiary or early Quaternary formations of Java." 
			Here we find the Java man discovery, itself questionable, once more 
			being used to dismiss evidence for humans of modern abilities in 
			very ancient times. The evolutionary hypothesis was apparently so 
			privileged that any evidence contradicting it could be almost 
			automatically rejected. But although Holmes doubted that beings 
			capable of making the Nampa image could have existed at the same 
			time as the primitive Java ape-man, we find today that humans, of 
			various levels of technological expertise, coexist in Africa with 
			gorillas and chimpanzees. 
			Holmes went on to say:
 
				
				"Like the auriferous gravel finds of 
			California, if taken at its face value the specimen establishes an 
			antiquity for Neolithic culture in America so great that we hesitate 
			to accept it without further confirmation. While it may have been 
			brought up as reported, there remains the possibility that it was 
			not an original inclusion under the lava. It is not impossible that 
			an object of this character could have descended from the surface 
			through some crevice or water course penetrating the lava beds and 
			have been carried through deposits of creeping quicksand aided by 
			underground waters to the spot tapped by the drill." 
				 
			It is 
			instructive to note how far a scientist like Holmes will go to 
			explain away evidence he does not favor. One should keep in mind, 
			however, that any evidence, including evidence currently used to 
			buttress the theory of evolution, could be explained away in this 
			fashion. 
			A barrier to the supposition that the Nampa image was recently 
			manufactured by recent Indians and somehow worked its way down from 
			the surface may be found in this statement by Holmes:
 
				
				"It should be 
			remarked, however, that forms of art closely analogous to this 
			figure are far to seek, neither the Pacific slope on the west nor 
			the Pueblo region on the south furnishing modeled images of the 
			human figure of like character or of equal artistic merit."
 
			GOLD CHAIN IN CARBONIFEROUS COAL FROM MORRISONVILLE, ILLINOISOn June 11, 1891, The Morrisonville Times reported:
 
				
				"A curious find 
			was brought to light by Mrs. S. W. Gulp last Tuesday morning. As she 
			was breaking a lump of coal preparatory to putting it in the 
			scuttle, she discovered, as the lump fell apart, embedded in a 
			circular shape a small gold chain about ten inches in length of 
			antique and quaint workmanship. At first Mrs. Gulp thought the chain 
			had been dropped accidentally in the coal, but as she undertook to 
			lift the chain up, the idea of its having been recently dropped was 
			at once made fallacious, for as the lump of coal broke it separated 
			almost in the middle, and the circular position of the chain placed 
			the two ends near to each other, and as the lump separated, the 
			middle of the chain became loosened while each end remained fastened 
			to the coal.    
				This is a study for the students of archaeology who 
			love to puzzle their brains over the geological construction of the 
			earth from whose ancient depth the curious is always dropping out. 
			The lump of coal from which this chain was taken is supposed to come 
			from the Taylorville or Pana mines [southern Illinois] and almost 
			hushes one's breath with mystery when it is thought for how many 
			long ages the earth has been forming strata after strata which hid 
			the golden links from view. The chain was an eight-carat gold and 
			weighed eight penny-weights." 
			In a letter to Ron Calais, Mrs. 
			Vernon W. Lauer, recently the 
			publisher of The Morrisonville Times, stated:  
				
				"Mr. Gulp was editor 
			and publisher of the Times in 1891. Mrs. Gulp, who made the 
			discovery, moved to Taylorville after his death—remarried and her 
			death occurred on February 3, 1959."  
			Calais told our research 
			assistant (Stephen Bernath) that he had information the chain was 
			given to one of Mrs. Gulp's relatives after her death, but Calais 
			could not trace the chain further. 
			The Illinois State Geological Survey has said the coal in which the 
			gold chain was found is 260-320 million years old. This raises the 
			possibility that culturally advanced human beings were present in 
			North America during that time.
 
 
			
			CARVED STONE FROM LEHIGH COAL MINE NEAR WEBSTER, IOWA
 The April 2, 1897 edition of the Daily News of Omaha, Nebraska, 
			carried an article titled "Carved Stone Buried in a Mine," which 
			described an object from a mine near Webster City, Iowa.
 
			  
			The article 
			stated:  
				
				"While mining coal today in the Lehigh coal mine, at a depth 
			of 130 feet, one of the miners came upon a piece of rock which 
			puzzles him and he was unable to account for its presence at the 
			bottom of the coal mine. The stone is of a dark grey color and about 
			two feet long, one foot wide and four inches in thickness. Over the 
			surface of the stone, which is very hard, lines are drawn at angles 
			forming perfect diamonds. The center of each diamond is a fairly 
			good face of an old man having a peculiar indentation in the 
			forehead that appears in each of the pictures, all of them being 
			remarkably alike. 
				Of the faces, all but two are looking to the right. How the stone 
			reached its position under the strata of sandstone at a depth of 130 
			feet is a question the miners are not attempting to answer. Where 
			the stone was found the miners are sure the earth had never before 
			been disturbed."
 
			Inquiries to the Iowa State Historical Preservation 
			and Office of State Archaeology at the University of Iowa revealed 
			nothing new. 
			The Lehigh coal is probably from the Carboniferous.
 
 
			
			IRON CUP FROM OKLAHOMA COAL MINE
 On January 10, 1949, Robert Nordling sent a photograph of an iron 
			cup to Frank L. Marsh of Andrews University, in Berrien Springs, 
			Michigan.
 
			  
			Nordling wrote:  
				
				"I visited a friend's museum in southern 
			Missouri. Among his curios, he had the iron cup pictured on the 
			enclosed snapshot." 
			At the private museum, the iron cup had been displayed along with 
			the following affidavit, made by Frank J. Kenwood in Sulphur 
			Springs, Arkansas, on November 27, 1948:  
				
				"While I was working in the 
			Municipal Electric Plant in Thomas, Okla. in 1912, I came upon a 
			solid chunk of coal which was too large to use. I broke it with a 
			sledge hammer. This iron pot fell from the center, leaving the 
			impression or mould of the pot in the piece of coal. Jim Stall (an 
			employee of the company) witnessed the breaking of the coal, and saw 
			the pot fall out. I traced the source of the coal, and found that it 
			came from the Wilburton, Oklahoma, Mines."  
			According to Robert O. 
			Fay of the Oklahoma Geological Survey, the Wilburton mine coal is 
			about 312 million years old. In 1966, Marsh sent the photo of the 
			cup and the correspondence relating to it to Wilbert H. Rusch, a 
			professor of biology at Concordia College, in Ann Arbor, Michigan. 
			Marsh stated:  
				
				"Enclosed is the letter and snap sent me by Robert Nordling some 17 years ago. When I got interested enough in this 
			'pot' (the size of which can be gotten at somewhat by comparing it 
			with the seat of the straight chair it is resting on) a year or two 
			later I learned that this 'friend' of Nordling's had died and his 
			little museum was scattered. Nordling knew nothing of the 
			whereabouts of the iron cup. It would challenge the most alert 
			sleuth to see if he could run it down. . . . If this cup is what it 
			is sworn to be, it is truly a most significant artifact." 
				 
			It is an 
			unfortunate fact that evidence such as this iron cup tends to get 
			lost as it passes from hand to hand among people not fully aware of 
			its significance.
 
			
			A SHOE SOLE FROM NEVADA
 On October 8, 1922, the American Weekly section of the New York 
			Sunday American ran a prominent feature titled "Mystery of the 
			Petrified 'Shoe Sole' 5,000,000 Years Old," by Dr. W. H. Ballou.
 
			  
			Ballou wrote:  
				
				"Some time ago, while he was prospecting for fossils 
			in Nevada, John T. Reid, a distinguished mining engineer and 
			geologist, stopped suddenly and looked down in utter bewilderment 
			and amazement at a rock near his feet. For there, a part of the rock 
			itself, was what seemed to be a human footprint! Closer inspection 
			showed that it was not a mark of a naked foot, but was, apparently, 
			a shoe sole which had been turned into stone. The forepart was 
			missing. But there was the outline of at least two-thirds of it, and 
			around this outline ran a well-defined sewn thread which had, it 
			appeared, attached the welt to the sole. Further on was another line 
			of sewing, and in the center, where the foot would have rested had 
			the object been really a shoe sole, there was an indentation, 
			exactly such as would have been made by the bone of the heel rubbing 
			upon and wearing down the material of which the sole had been made. 
			Thus was found a fossil which is the foremost mystery of science 
			today. For the rock in which it was found is at least 5,000,000 
			years old." 
			Reid brought the specimen to New York, where he tried to bring it to 
			the attention of other scientists.  
			  
			Reid reported:  
				
				"On arrival at New 
			York, I showed this fossil to Dr. James F. Kemp, geologist of 
			Columbia University; Professors H. F. Osborn, D. Matthew and E. O. Hovey of the American Museum of Natural History. All of these men 
			reached the same conclusion, in effect that 'it was the most 
			remarkable natural imitation of an artificial object they had ever 
			seen.' These experts agreed, however, that the rock formation was 
			Triassic, and manufacturers of shoes agreed that originally the 
			specimen was a hand-welted sole. Dr. W. D. Matthew wrote a brief 
			report on the find declaring that while all the semblances of a shoe 
			were present, including the threads with which it had been sewn, it 
			was only a remarkable imitation, a lusus naturae, or 'freak of 
			nature.'"  
			Curiously enough, an inquiry by us to the American Museum 
			of Natural History resulted in a reply that the report by Matthew is 
			not in their files. 
			Reid, despite Matthew's dismissal, nevertheless persisted:
 
				
				"I next 
			got hold of a microphotographer and an analytical chemist of the 
			Rockefeller Institute, who, on the outside, so as not to make it an 
			institute matter, made photos and analyses of the specimen. The 
			analyses proved up [removed] any doubt of the shoe sole having been 
			subjected to Triassic fossilization. . . . The microphoto 
			magnifications are twenty times larger than the specimen itself, 
			showing the minutest detail of thread twist and warp, proving 
			conclusively that the shoe sole is not a resemblance, but is 
			strictly the handiwork of man. Even to the naked eye the threads can 
			be seen distinctly, and the definitely symmetrical outlines of the 
			shoe sole. Inside this rim and running parallel to it is a line 
			which appears to be regularly perforated as if for stitches. I may 
			add that at least two geologists whose names will develop someday 
			have admitted that the shoe sole is valid, a genuine fossilization 
			in Triassic rocks."  
			The Triassic rock bearing the fossil shoe sole 
			is now recognized as being far more than 5 million years old. The 
			Triassic period is now generally dated at 213-248 million years ago.
 
			
			BLOCK WALL IN AN OKLAHOMA MINE
 W. W. McCormick of Abilene, Texas, reported his grandfather's 
			account of a stone block wall that was found deep within a coal 
			mine:
 
				
				"In the year 1928, I, Atlas Almon Mathis, was working in coal 
			mine No. 5., located two miles north of Heavener, Oklahoma. This was 
			a shaft mine, and they told us it was two miles deep. The mine was 
			so deep that they let us down into it on an elevator. . . . They 
			pumped air down to us, it was so deep."  
			This report was reprinted in 
			a book by Brad Steiger. One evening, Mathis was blasting coal loose 
			by explosives in "room 24" of this mine.  
				
				"The next morning," said 
			Mathis, "there were several concrete blocks laying in the room. 
			These blocks were 12-inch cubes and were so smooth and polished on 
			the outside that all six sides could serve as mirrors. Yet they were 
			full of gravel, because I chipped one of them open with my pick, and 
			it was plain concrete inside."  
			Mathis added:  
				
				"As I started to timber 
			the room up, it caved in; and I barely escaped. When I came back 
			after the cave-in, a solid wall of these polished blocks was left 
			exposed. About 100 to 150 yards farther down our air core, another 
			miner struck this same wall, or one very similar."  
			The coal in the 
			mine was probably Carboniferous, which would mean the wall was at 
			least 286 million years old.According to Mathis, the mining company officers immediately pulled 
			the men out of the mine and forbade them to speak about what they 
			had seen. This mine was closed in the fall of 1928, and the crew 
			went to mine number 24, near Wilburton, Oklahoma.
 
			Mathis said the Wilburton miners told of finding "a solid block of 
			silver in the shape of a barrel. . . . with the prints of the staves 
			on it." The coal from Wilburton was formed between 280 and 320 
			million years ago.
 
			Admittedly, these are very bizarre stories, accompanied by very 
			little in the way of proof. But such stories are told, and we wonder 
			how many of them there are and if any of them are true.
 
			In a book by M. K. Jessup, we recently ran across the following 
			wall-in-coal-mine story:
 
				
				"It is. . . . reported that James Parsons, 
			and his two sons, exhumed a slate wall in a coal mine at Hammondville, Ohio, in 1868. It was a large, smooth wall, disclosed 
			when a great mass of coal fell away from it, and on its surface, 
			carved in bold relief, were several lines of hieroglyphics." 
				 
			Of 
			course, such stories could be tall tales, but they might also be 
			leads for interesting research. 
			The foregoing sampling of discoveries indicating a relatively high 
			level of civilization in very distant ages was compiled from reports 
			published in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, but 
			similar reports continue up to the present day. We shall now review 
			some of them.
 
 
			
			METALLIC TUBES FROM CHALK IN FRANCE
 Y. Druet and H. Salfati announced in 1968 the discovery of 
			semi-ovoid metallic tubes of identical shape but varying size in 
			Cretaceous chalk. The chalk bed, exposed in a quarry at Saint-Jean 
			de Livet, France, is estimated to be least 65 million years old. 
			Having considered and eliminated several hypotheses, Druet and 
			Salfati concluded that intelligent beings had lived 65 million years 
			ago.
 
			Desiring more information, we wrote to the geomorphology laboratory 
			at the University of Caen, to which Druet and Salfati reportedly 
			turned over their specimens, but we have not received a reply. We 
			invite readers to communicate to us any information they might have 
			about this case or similar cases, for inclusion in future editions 
			of this book.
 
 
			
			SHOE PRINT IN SHALE FROM UTAH
 In 1968, William J. Meister, a draftsman and amateur trilobite 
			collector, reported finding a shoe print in the Wheeler Shale near 
			Antelope Spring, Utah. This shoe-like indentation and its cast were 
			revealed when Meister split open a block of shale. Clearly visible 
			within the imprint were the remains of trilobites, extinct marine 
			arthropods. The shale holding the print and the trilobite fossils is 
			from the Cambrian, and would thus be 505 to 590 million years old.
 
			Meister described the ancient shoe-like impression in an article 
			that appeared in the Creation Research Society Quarterly:
 
				
				"The heel 
			print was indented in the rock about an eighth of an inch more than 
			the sole. The footprint was clearly that of the right foot because 
			the sandal was well worn on the right side of the heel in 
			characteristic fashion." 
			Meister supplied the following important piece of additional 
			information:  
				
				"On July 4, I accompanied Dr. Clarence Coombs, Columbia 
			Union College, Tacoma, Maryland, and Maurice Carlisle, graduate 
			geologist, University of Colorado at Boulder, to the site of the 
			discovery. After a couple of hours of digging, Mr. Carlisle found a 
			mud slab, which he said convinced him that the discovery of fossil 
			tracks in the location was a distinct possibility, since this 
			discovery showed that the formation had at one time been at the 
			surface." 
			Scientists who were made aware of the Meister discovery were 
			sometimes contemptuous in their dismissals. This is evident from 
			private correspondence supplied to us by George F. Howe of Los 
			Angeles Baptist College, who requested that we quote from it 
			anonymously. A geologist from Brigham Young University, quite 
			familiar with the Antelope Springs region, wrote in 1981 that the 
			track represented "an oddity of weathering which uninformed people 
			mistakenly interpret for fossil forms." 
			A professor of evolutionary biology from a Michigan university 
			stated, when asked about the Meister print:
 
				
				"I am not familiar with 
			the trilobite case. . . . but I would be greatly surprised if this 
			isn't another case of fabrication or willful misrepresentation. 
			There is not one case where a juxtaposition of this type has ever 
			been confirmed. So far the fossil record is one of the best tests 
			that evolution has occurred. I put the creationists and those that 
			believe in a flat earth in the same category. They simply do not 
			want to believe in facts and hard evidence. There is not much you 
			can do with such people. . . . Nothing has emerged in recent years 
			to refute the fact that evolution has, and continues to occur, 
			irrespective of what the self-proclaimed 'scientific' creationists 
			claim. The ability of individuals in our society to be duped and 
			brainwashed, either intentionally or unknowingly, by our mass media 
			and certain leaders never ceases to amaze me." 
			The evolutionary biologist admitted he had not familiarized himself 
			with the "facts and hard evidence" relating to the Meister sandal 
			print before passing judgment. He was thus guilty of the same sin he 
			accused the creationists of committing. We do not necessarily accept 
			the Meister print as genuine, but we believe it should be evaluated 
			on its own merits, rather than on the basis of inflexible 
			preconceptions. 
			William Lee Stokes, a biologist and geologist at the University of 
			Utah, examined the Meister print shortly after it was discovered. 
			Stokes stated:
 
				
				"After seeing the specimen I explained to Mr. Meister 
			why I could not accept it as a footprint and why geologists in 
			general would not accept it. At the very least, we would expect a 
			true footprint to be one of a sequence showing right and left prints 
			somewhat evenly spaced, of the same size and progressing regularly 
			in one direction. . . . It is most significant that no other 
			matching prints were obtained. I know of no instance where a 
			solitary one-of-a-kind impression has been accepted and reported in 
			a scientific journal as a genuine footprint no matter how 
			well-preserved it might be."  
			But in an article that appeared in 
			Scientific American in 1969, H. de Lumley reported a single 
			humanlike footprint from the Middle Pleistocene habitation site at 
			Terra Amata in southern France. 
			Stokes further stated:
 
				
				"A true footprint should also show 
			displacement or squeezing aside of the soft material into which the 
			foot was pressed. . . . From my examination of this specimen I can 
			say that there is no evidence of squeezing or pushing aside of the 
			matrix." 
			In 1984, one of us (Thompson) visited Meister in Utah. Close 
			inspection of the print revealed no obvious reason why it could not 
			be accepted as genuine. Concerning squeezing aside of the matrix, 
			much depends on the consistency of the matrix and the nature of the 
			object making the imprint. The rounded contours of a bare foot 
			result in more pushing aside of the matrix than the sharp edges of 
			the soles of footwear.  
			  
			We have observed that shoes and sandals can 
			leave very sharp impressions in relatively compact, moist beach 
			sand, with very little sign of pushing aside of the matrix. Shale, 
			the rock in which the Meister print was made, is formed by the 
			consolidation of clay, mud, or silt. One could microscopically 
			examine the grain structure of the shale within the region of the 
			print in order to determine whether or not there is any evidence 
			suggesting that the print was not caused by pressure from above. 
			Stokes concluded that the Meister specimen was the result of 
			spalling, a natural fracturing of the rock, and stated that the 
			geology department of the University of Utah had in its collection 
			several products of spalling, some resembling footprints. One would 
			have to see these specimens to judge if they really resemble 
			footprints to the extent the Meister specimen does. The shape of the 
			Meister print, as shown by our visual inspection and computer 
			analysis, almost exactly matches that of a modern shoeprint.
 
			Furthermore, spalling normally occurs on the surfaces of rocks. The 
			Meister print, however, was found in the interior of a block of 
			shale that was split. Significantly, the shale in the region of the 
			print is of a rougher texture than the shale on the other parts of 
			the split block's surface. This suggests that the rock split where 
			it did not accidentally but because of a line of weakness along the 
			boundary of the two textures. One could, therefore, propose that an 
			ancient shoe caused this shoe-shaped area of weakness. 
			Alternatively, the area of weakness might have resulted from some 
			other unknown cause, in which case the shoe-like shape is entirely 
			coincidental. This would be a rather remarkable freak of nature, for 
			the print does not even slightly depart from the shape of a genuine 
			shoe.
 
			The Meister print, as evidence for a human presence in the distant 
			past, is ambiguous. Some scientists have dismissed the print after 
			only cursory examination. Others have rejected it sight unseen, 
			simply because its Cambrian age puts it outside the realm of what 
			might be expected according to evolutionary theory. We suggest, 
			however, that the resources of empirical investigation have not yet 
			been exhausted and that the Meister print is worthy of further 
			research.
 
 
			
			GROOVED SPHERE FROM SOUTH AFRICA
 Over the past several decades, South African miners have found 
			hundreds of metallic spheres, at least one of which has three 
			parallel grooves running around its equator. According to an article 
			by J. Jimison, the spheres are of two types—"one of solid bluish 
			metal with white flecks, and another which is a hollow ball filled 
			with a white spongy center."
 
			  
			Roelf Marx, curator of the museum of Klerksdorp, South Africa, where some of the spheres are housed, 
			said:  
				
				"The spheres are a complete mystery. They look man-made, yet 
			at the time in Earth's history when they came to rest in this rock 
			no intelligent life existed. They're nothing like I have ever seen 
			before." 
			We wrote to Roelf Marx for further information about the spheres. He 
			replied in a letter dated September 12, 1984:  
				
				"There is nothing 
			scientific published about the globes, but the facts are: They are 
			found in pyrophyllite, which is mined near the little town of 
			Ottosdal in the Western Transvaal. This pyrophyllite is a quite soft 
			secondary mineral with a count of only 3 on the Mohs scale and was 
			formed by sedimentation about 2.8 billion years ago. On the other 
			hand the globes, which have a fibrous structure on the inside with a 
			shell around it, are very hard and cannot be scratched, even by 
			steel."  
			The Mohs scale of hardness is named after 
			Friedrich Mohs, 
			who chose ten minerals as references points for comparative 
			hardness, with talc the softest (1) and diamond the hardest (10). 
			In his letter to us, Marx said that A. Bisschoff, a professor of 
			geology at the University of Potchefstroom, told him that the 
			spheres were "limonite concretions." Limonite is a kind of iron ore. 
			A concretion is a compact, rounded rock mass formed by localized 
			cementation around a nucleus.
 
			 
			
			
			Grooved Sphere from South Africa 
			  
			One problem with the hypothesis that the objects are limonite 
			concretions concerns their hardness. As noted above, the metallic 
			spheres cannot be scratched with a steel point, indicating they are 
			extremely hard. But standard references on minerals state that 
			limonite registers only 4 to 5.5 on the Mohs scale, indicating a 
			relatively low degree of hardness. Furthermore, limonite concretions 
			usually occur in groups, like masses of soap bubbles stuck together. 
			They do not, it seems, normally appear isolated and perfectly round, 
			as is the case with the objects in question. Neither do they 
			normally appear with parallel grooves encircling them. 
			For the purposes of this study, it is the sphere with three parallel 
			grooves around its equator that most concerns us. Even if it is 
			conceded that the sphere itself is a limonite concretion, one still 
			must account for the three parallel grooves. In the absence of a 
			satisfactory natural explanation, the evidence is somewhat 
			mysterious, leaving open the possibility that the South African 
			grooved sphere—found in a mineral deposit 2.8 billion years old—was 
			made by an intelligent being.
 
 
			
			ANOMALOUS HUMAN SKELETAL REMAINS
 In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries scientists found 
			numerous stone implements and other artifacts in extremely old 
			formations. They also discovered anatomically modern human skeletal 
			remains in similarly ancient geological contexts.
 Although these human bones originally attracted considerable 
			attention, they are now practically unknown.
 
			  
			Most current literature 
			gives one the impression that after the discovery of the first 
			Neanderthal in the 1850s no significant skeletal finds were made 
			until the discovery of Java man in the 1890s.
 
			
			TRENTON FEMUR
 On December 1, 1899, Ernest Volk, a collector working for the 
			Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard 
			University, discovered a human femur in a fresh railroad cut south 
			of Hancock Avenue within the city limits of Trenton, New Jersey. The 
			femur was found lying on a small ledge, 91 inches beneath the 
			surface. Volk stated:
 
				
				"About four inches over or above the bone. . . 
			. was a place about the length of the bone where it evidently had 
			fallen out of."  
			The human femur was photographed by Volk, who 
			declared that the overlying strata immediately above and for some 
			distance on either side of the find were undisturbed. Volk said that 
			the femur was thoroughly fossilized. Two human skull fragments were 
			taken from the same layer that yielded the femur. 
			In a letter dated July 30, 1987, Ron Witte of the New Jersey 
			Geological Survey told us that the stratum containing the Trenton 
			femur and skull fragments is from the Sangamon interglacial and is 
			about 107,000 years old. According to standard ideas, human beings 
			of modern type arose in southern Africa about 100,000 years ago and 
			migrated to America at most 30,000 years ago.
 
			  
			
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