Ancient

Astronauts

 

 

  BEFORE COPERNICUS AND NASA
(from p.70 of Divine Encounters- Zecharia Sitchin- author of The Earth Chronicles)

Until the publication by Nicolaus Copernicus of his astronomical work
De revolutionibus orbium coelestium in 1543 (and for many years thereafter), the established wisdom was that the Sun, Moon and other known planes orbit the Earth. The Catholic Church, which condemned Copemicus for that heresy, officially acknowledged its mistake only 450 years later, in 1993.

The first new celestial objects discovered after the invention of telescopes were the four large moons of Jupiter-by Galileo, in 1610.

Uranus, the planet beyond Saturn, which cannot be seen with the naked eye from Earth, was discovered with the aid of improved telescopes in 1781. Neptune was discovered beyond Uranus in 1846. And Pluto, the outermost known planet, was found only in 1930.

Yet the Sumerians, millennia ago, had already depicted (see Fig. 13 and the detail, "A-, opposite) a complete Solar System. with the Sun-not Earth-in the center; a Solar System that includes Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto, and one more large planet ("Nibiru") as it passes between Jupiter and Mars.

It was only in the 1970's that NASA satellites gave us close-up views of our neighboring planes, and only in 1986 and 1989 that Voyager-2 flew by Uranus and Neptune. Yet Sumerian texts (quoted by us in The 12'th Planet) had already described those outer planets exactly as NASA found them to be.

The first ring surrounding Saturn was not discovered unyil 1659 (by Christian Huygens). Yet the imprint of an Assyrian cylinder seal on a clay envelope encasing a tablet, that shows in the celestial background the Sun, the Moon (its crescent), and Venus (eight-pointed "star), also depicts a small planet-Mars-separated from a larger one (Jupiter) (by a straw representing the Asteroid Belt?) followed by a large ringed planet-Saturn! ("B" opposite).

 

 

 

 

 

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