Anonymous ID: 2ff8c5 Jan. 11, 2020, 6:39 a.m. No.7782578   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5823 >>3542

Good thread anon! Ancient giants and the cover-up are my original tinfoil, and I like Brian Foerster too. His latest video is YUGE. Don't know if you saw it yet, but the M.D. radiologist he has with him kind of had an Oh Shit moment when he was estimating the age and height of that female skeleton. Check it out.

Also, another cool thing about Foerster, is that I had never paid much attention to Inca repairs of megalithic structures. It's so obvious once you start looking for it.

Anonymous ID: 2ff8c5 Jan. 12, 2020, 11:44 a.m. No.7793636   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4186 >>1483

>>7793542

I agree. And nobody in the academic community has addressed the skulls that are missing the sagittal suture, which all Homo Sapiens have.

What got me in that video was the unerupted teeth. A 5'4" 8-12 year old female would be huge in that area of the world, especially so long ago. I read Cabeza De Vaca's The Account, which was his diary of exploring the Texas gulf coast. He ran into the Karankawa Indians, who (the men) were reported to average between 6 and 7 feet tall and have reddish hair(no accurate numbers have been published). In contrast, the women were reported to be fairly short. Point being, I wonder how big some of the male skeletons are.