File: <bronze.fig.htm>
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<bron 1> -- Early forms of ogam
consain alphabet & fringe ogam
<bron 2> -- Forms of letters used in the Tifinag
alphabet
<bron 3> -- Figures of the sun globe at Hjulatorp,
Sweden
<bron 4> -- The inscription at Hjulatorp, Sweden, Old
Norse text
<bron 5> --
The inscription at Hjulatorp, Sweden
<bron 6> -- Detail from a Bronze Age ship petroglyph
<bron 7> -- Inscription at Baca, Brasted, Sweden
<bron 8> -- School lessons from ancient Scandinavia
<bron 9> -- More Bronze Age school lessons from Sweden
<bron 10> -- Three of the named vessels of a Bronze Age
fleet
<bron 11> -- A prayer engraved at Vanlös, Bohuslän,
Sweden
<bron 12> --
A fishing charm or prayer from Bohuslän, Sweden
<bron 13> --
A large inscription at Fossum, Bohuslän, Sweden that depicts scenes from
the winter
festival called
Thorri
<bron 14> -- Another athletic event depicted in the
Thorri inscription at Fossum, Bohuslän
<bron 15> -- Figures from the Thorri festival
inscriptions of Bohuslän, Sweden are sorcerers
<bron 16> -- Skits of athletic competition at the Thorri
festival
<bron 17> -- Apparent Old Norse or Old Teutonic Roots in
the Berber Language
<bron 18> -- General view of part of the site near
Peterborough, Ontario, Canada
<bron 19> --
Detail at the Peterborough, Ontario site
<bron 20> -- International friendship in the Bronze Age
<bron 21> --
King Woden-lithi's artists at Peterborough, Ontario carved different
kinds of vessels in the
rocks
<bron 22> --
The Peterborough, Ontario rock carvings depict what the Nordic visitors
saw in America
<bron 23> --
Woden-lithi had engraved
landmark in the history of American commerce and scientific
measurement at the
Peterborough, Ontario site
<bron 24> -- An ancient public notice engraved in Tifinag
letters at Peterborough, Ontario
<bron 25> -- Cromlech or funerary dolmen at Carrazeda,
Portugal
<bron 26> -- Exposed cromlech dolmen, Orkney Islands
<bron 27> --
Cromlech dolmen, Gay Head, Martha's Vineyard
<bron 28> -- Small dolmen, Westport, MA
<bron 29> --
Another small dolmen, Westport, MA
<bron 30> -- Small dolmen, Hampton, MA
<bron 31> --
Inscribed halberd on the capstone of a dolmen found in central Vermont
<bron 32> -- Dolmen discovered at lake Lujenda, northern
Minnesota
<bron 33> -- Dolmen at Proleek, County Louth, Ireland
<bron 34> -- Dolmen with massive capstone, Trelleborg,
Sweden
<bron 35> -- Dolmen with massive (40-ton) capstone at
Lynn, MA
<bron 36> -- View of supporting stones of the massive
capstone of the dolmen at Bartlett, NH
<bron 37> -- Massive orthostats of chamber at Mystery
Hill, North Salem, NH
<bron 38> -- The largest known dolmen in North America,
North Salem, NY
<bron 39> -- Megalithic chamber, or Jaettestue, near Aarhus, Denmark
<bron 40> --
Massive roof lintels of megalithic chamber near South Woodstock, VT
<bron 41> -- Slab lintel supported by drystone columns,Mystery
Hill, North Salem, NH
<bron 42> -- Entrance to subterranean chamber at Concord,
MA
<bron 43> --
Chamber entrance, utilizing natural features> -- Gungywamp, CT
<bron 44> -- An entrance to a chamber near White River,
central Vermont
<bron 45> -- Free-standing drystone walls, central
Vermont
<bron 46> -- Megalithic construction of internal walls by
drystone fitted blocks, Mystery Hill, NH
<bron 47> -- Rectangular form of internal plan of
megalithic chamber, South Woodstock, VT
<bron 48> -- Chamber covered by an earth mound, South
Woodstock, VT
<bron 49> -- Corbeling construction of the Upton chamber,
MA
<bron 50> -- Double wall construction in a Pictish broch,
Baile-Chladaich, Sutherland, Scotland
<bron 51> -- Megalithic construction of Pictish broch,
ca> -- 100 BC, in Baile Chladaich, Scotland
<bron 52> -- European type ancient skull from Holliston
Mills, eastern Tennessee
<bron 53> -- Markedly Europoid type of skull from
Holliston Mills, Tennessee
<bron 55> --
Petroglyph of Thunor with his hammer, Mjolnir> -- Milk River, Alberta, Canada
<bron 56> -- An Algonquian type skull from Holliston
Mills, TN
<bron 58> -- Pygmy skull type, from east Tennessee,
ranging back in time to at least 40,000 years BP
<bron 59> -- More examples of the pygmy skull type from
Holliston Mills, east Tennessee
<bron 60> -- Sculpture of a man executed in bedrock at
Searsmont, Maine
<bron 61> -- Massive stone head was discovered at Essex,
MA
<bron 62> -- Stone sculpture of a head, attributed to the
Irish-Norse -- From Vannes, Brittany
<bron 63> -- A travelers'
warning in Old Irish ogam, from
Inyo County, CA
<bron 64> -- Inferred origin
of the Tifinag alphabet (Table 2)
<bron 65> --
Opening phrases of Woden-lithi's inscription at Peterborough, Ontario
<bron 66> --
Woden-lithi gives us the name of his ship after identifying himself
<bron 67> -- Woden-lithi reveals the purpose of his visit
to Canada
<bron 68> -- Woden-lithi now tells us how long he stayed
in America.
<bron 69> -- Woden-lithi specifies the actual months he
was present in Canada
<bron 70> -- Woden-lithi relates how he dealt profitably
with the Algonquins, exhanging his trade goods
for copper ingots."
<bron 71> -- Woden lithi mentions how in this secluded
nook he hacked out [messages]while lingering here
<bron 72> -- An inscription at Crow Island, Penobscot Bay,
near Deer Isle, Maine
<bron 73> -- The Deer Isle, ME inscription reads "A
sheltered island, where ships may lie in a harbor> --
Haakon brought his
cog here."
<bron 74> -- Plan of calendar observatory at
Peterborough, Ontario
<bron 75> --
First section of the ancient Nordic zodiac at Peterborough, Ontario
<bron 76> -- Second section of the ancient Nordic zodiac
inscribed by Woden-lithi at his Peterborough
observatory
<bron 77> -- Azimuth directions of the major standing
stones at the Mystery Hill stone circle in New Hampshire
<bron 78> -- Plan of the stone circle at Big Basin, Santa
Cruz Mts., CA
<bron 80> -- Some stone circles at Trelleborg, Sweden
<bron 81> -- The main sun-god figure, at the central
sighting point of King Woden-lithi's observatory
<bron 82> -- The solar ship, at Peterborough, Ontario =
"Ship of the Blazing Standard"
<bron 83> -- The moon-goddess figure at Peterborough,
Ontario.
<bron 84> -- Major divinities and supernatural monsters of Norse Bronze Age religion
<bron 85> -- Yule-men from the
Mid-Winter Festival as held at King Woden-lithi's site at Peterborough
<bron 86> --
Bison sculpture from the valley of the Merrimack River, near Lawrence,
MA
<bron 87> -- A previously undeciphered stele found in the
Berroes District of northern Portugal
<bron 88> --
The Algonquian syllabary
<bron 89> --
Syllabary found on ancient Basque inscriptions of Spain and Portugal
<bron 90> -- First three lines of San Telmo stele in
Spain show Iberian & Algonquian syllabary similarities
<bron 91> -- Table 3, showing that the language of the
Algonquian Indians contains words of Basque origin
<bron 92> -- Lug, the Ancient Irish god of light, is
shown in Norse runes of AD 750-1050, from Castle Gardens,
Moneta, WY.
<bron 93> -- Lug, god of light at Alberta Provincial
Park, Canada
<bron 94> -- Carving in a nonresistant rock in the Milk River
valley, Alberta, Canada,
<bron 95> -- Inscription of recent origin found along the
valley of the Milk River in Alberta, Canada
<bron 96> -- Woden's magic spear, carved at Peterborough,
Ontario
<bron 97> -- Image of Woden at Peterborough, Ontario
<bron 98> --
Example of Dyad Tree Ogam
<bron 99> -- The tree Yggdrasil
<bron 100> -- Tree ogam inscription type found on coinage
of the Thracian Norse-Irish
<bron 102> -- Ogmios, god of the Gauls, appears on
petroglyphs in Inyo County, CA and Nevada
<bron 103> -- The Tree of Dread, Yggdrasil, at
Peterborough, Ontario
<bron 104> -- At Peterborough, Ontario, Woden acquires a
magic steed called Slehefnir
<bron 105> -- A Milk River inscription from southern
Alberta, Canada shows the Ancient Irish god Goibhnui.
<bron 106a> --
Evidence of sheep farming in petroglyphs from Cane Springs & Lost
City, NV
<bron 106b> -- British Columbia inscription, "A fleece timely to be sheared."
<bron 107> -- Earliest depiction by Ancient Irish of the
Rocky Mountain sheep, or Bighorn,Valley of Fire, Atlatl
Rock, Nevada
<bron 108> -- Evidence of Norse-Irish contacts by the Milk
River, near Writing-on-Stone, southern Alberta, Canada
<bron 109> -- An antelope rebus from the Milk River,
Alberta, Canada
<bron 110> -- More evidence of Norse-Irish contacts along
the Milk River sites, southern Alberta, Canada
<bron 111> -- Tsiw (Tiw of Anglo-Saxon lore), depicted as
the major god of the Aesir
<bron 112> --
King Woden-lithi's dedication inscribed just below the image of the war
god Tsiw
<bron 113> -- A bronze-Age conception of celestial
mechanics> -- Peterborough, Ontario, Canada
<bron 114> -- A Norse iron battle-axe discovered at Rocky
Neck, near Gloucester, MA
<bron 115> -- Pictorial lessons in ogam ,Garfield Flat,
Mineral County, Nevada & an archaic type of
ship, at
Adams Lake,
British Columbia
<bron 116> -- Ancient Irishiberian inscription cut in lava
rock at Tule Lake, California
<bron 117> -- Fishing activity depicted as Irish Iberian,
Tule lake, CA
<bron 119> -- Thunor, god of thunder, inscription at
Peterborough, Ontario
<bron 120> -- Thunor wearing his giant glove, inscription
at Peterborough, Ontario
<bron 121> -- Thunor's hammer, Mjolnir, and his giant
glove, Glofi, increased his power over the serpents of
Midgard.
<bron 122> -- Thunor's duel with the Orm, serpent-dragon
of Middle Earth
<bron 123> -- This inscription at Peterborough, Ontario
depicts the Thunderer
<bron 124> -- Thunor with his hammer, Mjolnir, Milk River, Alberta, Canada
<bron 125> -- This petroglyph from Canal Flats, British
Columbia, points to Irish, not Scot, Gaelic
<bron 126> -- The male fertility god at Peterborough,
Ontario
<bron 127> -- The Ancient Irish god of the phallus, Mabona, Coral Gardens, near Moneta, Wyoming
<bron 128> -- Cultural contacts between Norse & Irish
peoples recurred many times in North America
<bron 129> -- Phallic megalith or menhir, Spain> --
<bron 130> -- Phallic menhir at Kerouezel, Brittany
<bron 131> --
Giant phallus-shaped megalith, Kerdef, Brittany
<bron 132> --
Phallic menjhir photographed at Phallus Hill, South Woodstock, VT
<bron 133> -- Another of the phallic stones found on
Phallus Hill, South Woodstock, VT
<bron 134> -- Large fallen phallic stone found in central
Vermont
<bron 135> --
Fallen inscribed phallic stone near South Woodstock, Vermont
<bron 137> -- Assemblage of phallic menhirs on hilltop
near South Woodstock, VT
<bron 138> -- Pictographs about marriage, Chandler Ranch,
near Lillooet, British Columbia.
<bron 139> -- Pictograph that records a wedding ceremony,
Chandler Ranch, near Lillooet, British Columbia.
<bron 140> -- Petroglyph of a Camanachd Player?
Stillwater Range, Churchill Co., Nevada
<bron 141> -- Figures hurling the caber, a Ancient Irish
pastime, East Walker River, Nevada
<bron 142> -- Runners with Gaelic ogam inscription,
Vernon, British Columbia
<bron 143> -- A ball game in ancient Nevada, at Cane
Springs
<bron 144> -- Phallic god and god of music combined in an
image of Mabo The pictograph is a more
recent
work by a Takhelne
speaker of mixed (creolinized) Irish-Amerind tongue, John Corner's Vernon,
British Columbia
site
<bron 145> -- Lyre-faced
Mabo the Melodious, Apollo of the American Irish immigrants and god of
music> -- Cane Springs,
Clark County,
Nevada
<bron 146> -- Mabo the Melodious., Cane Springs, Clark County,
Nevada, his face spells his name
<bron 147> -- The lyre-faced god, White Pine Co., Nevada,
<bron 148> -- Petroglyphs in black basalt at Stillwater
Range, Nevada
<bron 149> -- Pictograph of the lesser Ancient Irish harp,
Spanish Springs, Nevada
<bron 150> -- Pictograph depicting a song accompanied by
the harp, East Walker River, Nevada
<bron 151> -- Massive stone seats or "druids'
chair" at Sutton, west of Boston, MA
<bron 152> -- Mother-goddess of the Plains Irish
immigrants., Milk River, Alberta
<bron 153> -- Petroglyph at the Milk River, Alberta,
Canada, may depict a divination ceremony
<bron 154> -- Men-a-tol at land's End, Cornwall, England
<bron 155> --
Men-a-tol at Jefferson, New Hampshire
<bron 156> -- A prayer to the earth-mother at a Irish
Iberian site at East Peninsula, Tule Lake, CA
<bron 157> -- Petroglyphs, in Bronze Age style, from
Denmark & Peterborough, Ontario compared.
<bron 158> --
An unnamed goddess shown mounted upon a deer with reference to spinning
& weaving, Lost
City, Nevada
<bron 159> -- The goddess Sulis, patron of spinning and weaving,
on Petroglyph Keyhole Canyon, Nevada
<bron 160> --
Gaelic symbols referring to the prehistoric wool industry at site in
Lost City, southern Nevada
<bron 161> --
Prehistoric Gaelic reference to weaving equipment, Cane Springs, Nevada
<bron 162> -- Prehistoric Gaelic reference to loom posts,
Valley of Fire, Nevada
<bron 163> -- Prehistoric Gaelic reference to weaving sticks,
Valley of Fire, Nevada
<bron 164> -- Prehistoric Gaelic reference to weaving
equipment, Valley of Fire, Nevada
<bron 165> -- Prehistoric Gaelic hieroglyph, meaning
weaving comb, Valley of Fire, Nevada
<bron 166> -- Prehistoric Gaelic inscription showing
patterns for an embroidered gown and hood, Valley of Fire,
Nevada
<bron 167> --
Stone image of a female torso, believed to represent the mother goddess
Byanu, from near
Woodstock,
Vermont
<bron 168> -- Tanith-like figure of Byanu on the ceiling
of the chamber at South Woodstock, VT
<bron 169> -- Petroglyph of Wenri Crunch-Hand, the wolf
that bites off the hand of the god Tsiw, Peterborough,
Ontario
<bron 170> -- Ymir a sea giant, defeated by Thunor with
his hammer, Molnir> -- Peterborough, Ontario
<bron 171> -- Reference to a series of labeled petroglyphs
depicting serpents of Midgard (Middle Earth),
Peterborough,
Ontario
<bron 172> -- Serpent-dragons of Middle Earth,
Peterborough, Ontario
<bron 173> -- Ascent of the gods to Walhol> -- Ragnarök (Twilight of the Gods) begins with
the defeat of the
Aesir by the monsters of Midgard (Middle Earth),
Peterborough, Ontario
<bron 174> -- "Loki and the Dragon of Middle
Earth." John Corner site in British Columbia,
<bron 175> --
Engraved bone artifacts found near Mullelrup Mose, Denmark, in
Iberian-Phoenician script
(1500 and 1200
BC)
<bron 176> -- A Bronze Age receipt from the Danish
Maglemose (Mullerup Mose) region
<bron 177> --
Irish coins of the second century before Christ, issued in Spain and
Aquitania
<bron 178> -- Token coinage made from bone, circulating in
the Basque provinces adjacent to the Irish kingdom
of Aquitania in
the second century before Christ
<bron 179> -- Main features of the Grave Creek tumulus,
near Moundsville, West Virginia
<bron 180> --
One of several tablets discovered at Grave Creek, West Virginia,
believed to reflect an Iberian
presence in
Ancient America
<bron 181> --
Typical burial tumulus of the Iberian Bronze Age, from Portugal
<bron 182> --
Bell-shaped funerary urns from pre-Iroquois site at Owasco, New York and
from Marles, near
Barcelona,
compared
<bron 183> -- Incised patterns from bell-shaped and
similar pottery urns from Portugal, New York State, &
New Hampshire
<bron 185> -- Supposed bone comb found in one of the
Snapp's Bridge, TN burials
<bron 186> -- Bone artifact
decorated by fine grooves and inscribed in letters of the Iberian script, Irish
Iberian
Site, Tennessee
<bron 187> -- Warp-weight, & loom weight as part of
grave goods found with flexed skeletons, Snapp's Bridge
site, east
Tennessee
<bron 189> -- Ogam inscription on loom weight, Snapp's
Bridge site, east Tennessee
<bron 190> -- Loom weight (pesa de telar) from Irish Iron Age ,Castillo de Olarizu,
Spain
<bron 191> --
Three versions of the same Bronze Age riddle using pictographic symbols,
from Sweden, Denmark
& Canada
<bron 192> -- Three versions of another Bronze Age riddle
using pictographic symbols, from Sweden, Denmark &
Canada
<bron 193> -- Egyptian sculptors' depictions at the
monument of Ramesses III at Medinet Habu, of the Sea Peoples
that appear to
have been Nordic
<bron 194> -- Apparent Bronze Age links between the Nordic
world and North Africa
<World Climate> -- Eighteen thousand years of the
World's climate (estimations)
<Table 4a> -- List of some of the basic
vocabulary of the Bronze Age Teutonic peoples (pg. 1)
<Table 4b> -- List of some of the basic
vocabulary of the Bronze Age Teutonic peoples (pg. 2)
<Table 4c> -- List of some of the basic
vocabulary of the Bronze Age Teutonic peoples (pg. 3)
<Table 4d> -- List of some of the basic
vocabulary of the Bronze Age Teutonic peoples (pg. 4)
<Table 4e> -- List of some of the basic
vocabulary of the Bronze Age Teutonic peoples (pg. 5)
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _
Appreciation is
extended to René Fell for drawings shown in this section. The ancient
originators of the art
displayed are posthumously respectfully acknowledged.