For C2C fans, Streamlink is a super offer! You'll get daily podcasts & downloads of George's M-F shows, Ian's Saturday program, and our special Sunday show. And you'll have access to the last 90 days of shows to download, collect, and listen to at your leisure. Plus weekly streamed broadcasts of Somewhere in Time with Art Bell and our rotating Classic offerings!




Tuesday February 28th, 2006

Host

George Noory

Guests

Clip Streams

 
Gold & Ancient Mining
 
Annunaki Wars
 
Sumerian Tablets

Recap

Human Origins & the 'gods'

South African author Michael Tellinger presented the thesis that mankind was genetically created by ancient astronauts, the Annunaki, in order to serve as a work force at their gold mines in Africa some 200,000 years ago. The Annunaki needed gold particles to shield the atmosphere of their planet, he explained. There is evidence of ancient mines between 30,000-50,000 years old in Africa, and Sumerian depictions show miners using machinery and light to conduct their operations, he said. The value gold has had throughout civilizations originated with the Annunaki's obsession with it, Tellinger stated.

All of the twelve major religions reference a mythological god involved in our creation, he said. But humanity has been praying to the wrong god-- namely the ancient astronauts who genetically designed us for their dubious purposes, Tellinger argued. That is why he refers to them with the lower case letter "g." The residents of Sodom and Gomorrah may have actually been an Annunaki "resistance movement," who were wiped out by nuclear explosives, he added.

The Sumerian tablets, which have been translated by Zecharia Sitchin and others, are the oldest written historical documents. One from the Schoyen Collection in Norway talks about Kings who ruled for a total of 220,000 years-- information that is corroborated in other tablets, Tellinger reported.

Related Articles

'Pompeii of the East'

A new excavation on the Indonesian island of Sumbawa has revealed remains of a house preserved in ash from the catastrophic eruption of Mount Tambora in 1815. Researchers suspect that the entire village may still be encapsulated there exactly as it was in 1815. The year 1816 was globally known as "the Year Without a Summer" because of the effects from the volcanic ash released into the atmosphere. More at BBC News.
Copyright © 2008 Premiere Radio Networks.
Terms of Use | Privacy Statement | Copyright & Trademark Notice | Contest Rules | Streaming Help