QUOTE(TMPikachu @ Jan 18 2006, 11:55 PM) [snapback]4784676[/snapback]
While we wait for the scientific analysis of the map, let me add some background information on Chinese explorers besides Zheng He... and Marco Polo being influenced by the Chinese, and Chinese excursions around the world, and Egyptians.... "Did the Western Hemisphere Disappear for 10,000 years?"
Note... nobody seems to question Zheng He's alleged voyages to the new world... only the authenticity of the map found....
Bits and pieces of what I found... believe any or all or none of it..., I find it very interesting.http://www.sun-herald.com/NewsArchive4/021...tory=tp9de9.htmLINDSEY AT LARGE
Monks found America
It is certain that "Cristoforo Colombo" was johnny-come-lately in the discovery of America. Just who -- other than the Native Americans, who knew quite well where they were -- has been a controversy ever since Chris was accorded the honor.
Indeed, it is well-established that the great navigator we call Columbus was aware of Norse sagas about land on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean inhabited by "skrelings."
Archeologists have ample evidence that Old World sailors reached the Americas 3,000 years ago.
Thus, it is somewhat amusing to note the hullabaloo aroused last week by publication of a book "1421: The Year China Discovered America."
Author Gavin Menzies attributes the honor to a truly historical Admiral Zheng He, who is alleged to have sailed west -- a la Columbus -- completely around the world.
"It's crazy talk," says history professor Wang Xiaofu at Beijing University. "We (the Zheng He Association) absolutely do not accept this theory."
I agree with Professor Wang and offer a better candidate: Hwui Shan, who visited the North American continent in 458 and left a written record.
Hwui Shan is not his true family name but is a Chinese term meaning "very intelligent." Shan was born in land-locked Afghanistan and became a Buddhist monk. He was among 40 other young monks who set out to carry the faith of Buddha to the ends of the earth.
They spent a few years in China, which at that time navigated the open oceans with the aid of an instrument then unknown elsewhere -- the compass. We know that early Chinese ships sailed on regular schedules with ships capable of carrying up to 300 passengers.
Shan heard tales by sailors about countries beyond the "Eastern Ocean" -- a vast body of water the Spanish explorer Balboa would "discover" more than a thousand years later and name Pacific.
Chinese navigators knew there was land on the other side of the Eastern Ocean, just as Columbus knew the earth was round and that eventually he would reach land across the Atlantic.
The young Buddhist monks were intrigued by accounts of a fabulous land where "trees grew a mile tall, silkworms were 7 feet long, and birds had three legs."
A third-century Chinese poet, for example, had written of far eastern lands:
"East of the Eastern Ocean lie/The shores of the Land of Fusang. If, after landing there, you travel/ East for ten thousand li/You will come to another ocean, blue/vast, huge, boundless." (The Atlantic?)
The Chinese were among the earliest boat builders and navigators. Archeological discoveries in California and Central America bear out ancient contacts with Orientals.
The Japan Current, a strong river within the Pacific, speeds along at 70 to 100 miles per day in the initial stages of its course eastward to the southern reaches of Central America before swinging west. It is certain that pre-history sailors used this current as an aid in going to and coming from America.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/821404/postsPROBABLE ROUTE OF THE EGYPTIAN VOYAGE IN 232 B.C.
Deciphered rock and cave inscriptions from the Pacific islands, western New Guinea, and Santiago, Chile, tell of an Egyptian flotilla that set sail around 232 B.C., during the reign of Ptolemy III, on a mission to circumnavigate the globe. The six ships sailed under the direction of Captain Rata and Navigator Maui, a friend of the astronomer Eratosthenes (ca. 275-194 B.C.), who headed the famous library at Alexandria. Maui's inscriptions, as deciphered in the 1970s by epigrapher Barry Fell, indicated that this was a proof-of-
principle voyage, to demonstrate Eratosthenes' theorem that the world was round, and approximately 24,500 miles in circumference.
http://www.atlantisinamerica.com/atlantis/articles/art.aspStone stelae at Copan (Honduras) display Chinese features, while the 15 foot tall statues at Tula (Valley of Mexico) display the features of Polynesians. It now appears that all these diverse people were coming to the heart of the Americas from 1,500 to at least 15,000 years ago. The complex origins of the first Americans has also been confirmed by DNA studies that have revealed the presence of haplogroup X among Algonkian-speaking tribes such as the Ojibway. Today, haplogroup X is found in between two and four per cent of European populations, and in the Middle East, but it has never been found in northeast Asian peoples.
The question is no longer, "Did navigators come to the New World before Columbus and Lief Erikson?" The question is when did they stop coming, and why did they lose all memory of man's navigational past? In Europe the answer may be tied to the onset of the Dark and Middle Ages. We are becoming inured to catastrophic events of late. But what event caused the Dark ages to begin and the history of navigation and other knowledge to become lost? The answer to that question still eludes us.
http://www.1421.tv/pages/evidence/content.asp?EvidenceID=24Chinese records which escaped destruction (Largely taken from Chinese Discovery of Australia by Professor Wei Ju Xian) Australia
(i) Confucius: Spring and Autumn Annals (481 BC) recorded solar eclipses in Australia 17 April 592 and 11 August 553).
(ii) Classics of Mountains and Seas (338 BC) describes boomerangs, black millet and kangaroos.
(iii) Atlas of Foreign Countries (265-316 AD) describes small black natives of Northern Australia.
Poles/Equator
(i) Zhuangzi (3rd century BC): “It takes six months including flying and resting time for seagulls to fly 90,000 li from North to South Pole”.
(ii) Ancient Chinese books: “Distance North Pole to South Pole is more than 80,000 li”. [Old Chinese li = half a kilometre]
(iii) Qi-xie (643 BC): “If a person of Yan State [Hebei Province] goes north and a person of Yue State [Zhejian, S. China] goes south they will meet each other at the very end of their journey”.
(iv) Zhuangzi also mentions going round the earth from east to west. Xun zi [40 years after Zhuangzi] also mentions round earth from east to west.
(v) Lienzi (3rd century BC): “South of Africa sun cannot be seen for 50 consecutive days.
(vi) Illustrated Record of Strange Countries (published 1430) describes North Pole – Eskimos; coldness; sunshine hours; polar lights; sea elephants and seals.
(vii) Marco Polo mentioned several unique aspects of geography that could not possibly have been contrived from hearsay or imagination. For example, he mentions in one episode that while travelling towards the North Pole (by compass), he observed that the Pole Star (at the Geographic Pole) appeared to have a southerly bearing. This observation of the discrepancy between the location of the Magnetic North Pole and Polaris could only have been made by a person who had travelled to a point midway between the Geographic Pole and the Magnetic Pole. This is solid proof that Marco Polo had indeed reached the Canadian Arctic. – Dr. Gunnar Thompson. To view Dr. Thompson‘s fascinating research please visit www.marcopolovoyages.com