WHERE DID THE MAYA AND AZTECS COME FROM?
WHERE DID THE MAYA AND AZTECS COME FROM?
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Charles Étienne Brasseur de Bourbourg (1814 – 1874) was a 19th-century Flemish abbot. In addition to his clerical profession, the French abbot is universally known for his significant contributions to the knowledge of Mesoamerican peoples. In fact, Charles Étienne Brasseur was also a famous writer, ethnographer and archaeologist who specialized particularly in the study of the Maya and Aztec civilizations.
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According to the scholar, the Maya remembered their homeland as a “continent located in the Pacific,” and which had later sunk. They called this continent by the term “Land of Mu.”
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Until a few years ago this was thought to be just a legend. But the advent of satellites proved that it was all true. In fact, present-day Indonesia and Australia are ‘remnants’ of a much larger continent, which scientists call Sundaland. This continent located in the waters of the Pacific Ocean was partially submerged beginning 14,000 years ago, when the Pacific Ocean rose about 140 meters.
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How did the Maya know about the “submerged continent” in the Pacific Ocean? Was it just an incredible coincidence? Or were their ancestors really from Sundaland?
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Again, if we would only listen to science, and not to our prejudices, the Maya would be absolutely right. Their ancestors did come from Sundaland. How do we know for sure? According to Kenneth M. Olsen, PhD, a biologist specializing in plant evolution at Washington University in St. Louis, we have irrefutable evidence that navigators from the Sundaland and Sahuland area managed to get as far as Panama, Central America, in pre-Columbian times.
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The ‘living proof’ is the presence of the coconut in the Americas. This researcher has found that all coconut plants, wherever in the world they are found, originated either from India or from the area that used to be Sundaland. Moreover, the professor explains that, at least as far as great distances are concerned, the coconut plant does not migrate naturally, as seeds of other plants do. In its case, it has to be taken by human beings to other distant areas in order to take root there as well. If the coconut plant arrived in Central America in pre-Columbian times, it means that sailors from the Sundaland area arrived in America before Columbus and planted it. There is little to argue against that.
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The article continues in the book:
HOMO RELOADED – The hidden history of the last 75,000 years.
You can find a copy of the book at this link
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BM9RRKWW

