Anonymous ID: cdaf3a July 21, 2019, 12:03 p.m. No.23272   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3281

>>23034

fyi: Udders= Female

All cows have horns, most cows on farms have them cut off and cauterized while they're juvenile.

 

Cows are revered in India as being Divine Mothers, and The Cow Goddess exists in different forms: Hathor in Egypt, Ninsun in Mesopotamia, Kamadhenu in India.

This could just be a tacky pink flamingo type lawn ornament, but who knows.

The black and white cow is a Holstein breed, originally from the Netherlands, most commonly used in dairy.

Anonymous ID: cdaf3a July 21, 2019, 3:31 p.m. No.23497   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3505 >>3521 >>3526 >>3619 >>3755

>>23465

Not really sure how your drawing a keystone/arch conclusion here. The temple layouts all have Two central T-shaped stone pillars. They are not buttressed to support the weigh of an additional stone arch on-top. If they had any roof covering, it would have likely been timber and thatch like shown in the 3rd image. Gobekli Tepe was intentionally buried and preserved, reconstructions show no evidence of arch building.

>>23486

That was how I initially interpreted you statement, the apex of the fertile crescent. That may have some merit.

Anonymous ID: cdaf3a July 21, 2019, 4:46 p.m. No.23601   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3617

>>23504

During the Pleistocene era 12,900+ years ago the coastlines of the "cradle of civilization" where very different. The entire Persian Gulf was above water. The Western coast of India extended far beyond today's shore.

South of the outlet of the Indus river, there is a place called the Bay of Kutch (Cush methinks)

There are known ruins under the waters today, but there must be so many more to discover.

Anonymous ID: cdaf3a July 21, 2019, 5:20 p.m. No.23650   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3687 >>3754

>>23617

Ok, are you saying people didn't exist before Genesis? Aborigines didn't traveled to the tip of India, then on to the now submerged landmass of Sundaland, and on to Australia 50,000+ years ago?

 

I believe in the Biblical chronicle of real historic events. I don't think Gobeklie Tepe was the location of the Garden of Eden, that is more likely at the bottom of the Persian Gulf right now. The Younger Dryas cataclysm is what sparked worldwide stories of flood and devastation. I think the people of Gobekli Tepe where some of the first to begin rebuilding, based on the ancient high technology of Pleistocene peoples.