If you want to discover your genetic history and where you came from... you’ve found the right place!

888-806-2588

review of scientific and news articles on dna testing and popular genetics

Plato Prehistorian and Geneticist

Sunday, June 06, 2010

Mary Settegast is described on the jacket simply as an archeological researcher, the 20-year-old book being Plato Prehistorian; 10,000 to 5,000 B.C. Myth, Religion, Archaeology (Hudson:  Lindisfarne, 1990). It's obvious she is not a member of the entrenched academic community of archeologists and prehistorians, for she spends most of the introduction to her fascinating study inveighing against the Old Model and New Archeology and defending the value of myth. She then retells the Egyptian Priest's tale from Plato's Timaeus about how Solon's ancient Greek ancestors defeated an aggressive Atlantic sea-power situated on a now-lost continent beyond the Straits of Gilbraltar--the so-called Atlantis myth, which has no other source but the writings of Plato. Her thesis is that Plato is representing what he believed to be historical fact. Among other arguments, Settegast points out that it would have been impious for him to contrive a political fiction and put it in the mouth of Critias, who attributes the story to his grandfather, who received it from Solon himself, given the occasion of the dialogue, a celebration of Athena's festival day. She asks, "Would Socrates have Critias offer to the goddess as 'a just and truthful hymn of praise' (Timaeus 21) an intentional misrepresentation of Athena's own past history with the Greeks?"

Once Plato's word and intentions are vindicated it is possible to study the scattered clues he gives us to prehistory of the Mediterranean world in a new light. Settegast makes a good case that the Magdalenian cave art of 17,000/15,000 to 9000 BCE preserves the fading glory of an Atlantic culture of enormous power and sophistication that came to an abrupt end toward the end of the tenth millennium. She brackets the question of the location of a sunken continent and dwells instead on the blunders of modern prehistorians who fail to grasp the advanced picture of civilization left to us in Paleolithic remains like the Lascaux paintings. For instance, most anthropologists have explained the paintings as vehicles for sympathetic hunting magic without noting that it is the horse that is most commonly depicted while excavations of Magdlenian sites reveal almost exclusively the remains of reindeer as their principal animal food. The religious significance of the animals is lost on most analysts. Plato, as usual, provides the pertinent clue: the Atlantics worshipped Poseidon and regarded his sacred animal the horse with great awe. A revisionist look at the horses in cave paintings clarifies that the lines on horses' heads represent harnesses, not natural contours or anatomical details, proving that the Magdalenians or Atlantic peoples had tamed the horse by 12,000 BCE, some eight thousand years before the date assigned to the domestication of the horse in the conventional model.

 

Upper Paleolithic writing recovered from Magdalenian cave sites (top) compared to characters in three early written languages:  (b) Indus valley signs, (c) Greek and (d) Runic. Settegast (p. 28) after Forbes and Crowder, 1979.

I've just started to read the book and will conclude this "preview" for the blog by mentioning that one obstacle to accepting Plato's story at face value was that he describes the Atlantics as literate. The recent reevaluation of the "magic signs" in Magdalenian caves as a writing system with heirs in many Old World alphabets seems to bear him out once again...and make his detractors look stupid and full of hubris. It is the effect many Socratic dialogues were meant to have on their readers.

Addendum:  One of the offshoots of Atlantic Culture according to Plato Prehistorian was the Çatal Hüyük civilization that flourished in Anatolia from 6200-5300 BCE. Only 2-3 % of the 32 acre site has been excavated, but what has come to light so far includes amazing cyclopean walls, refined wall paintings and peculiar religious practices such as a vulture-bull rite, leopard shrine and Mistress of the Animals cult reminiscent of Venus figurines. It is conceivable that Atlantic Culture itself was spurred to life originally by admixture of Europeans with Neanderthals, since there are numerous signs of Neanderthal culture in  archeological remains. Significantly, the Venus figures once associated with Gravettian Culture now appear to have had their origins with Neanderthals, who occupied Europe for 350,000 years before H. sapiens sapiens. Venus figurines were worn about the neck by Neanderthals, as proved in several excavations in Spain and elsewhere. In 1961, archeologists unearthed the skull of a Neanderthal man in the ancient site of Chalcedon on the east side of the Bosporus in Asia Minor, although the find is seldom mentioned today.

Our Neanderthal Index is based on affinities with archaic populations presumed to carry the highest rate of admixture with Neanderthals. These include many of the Atlantic and Mediterranean populations mentioned in Plato Prehistorian, including Greek, Turkish, Syrian, Arabian, Basque, Egyptian and Berber.

Comments

S. M. Sullivan commented on 22-Nov-2010 09:32 PM

For clues to the sound values of some of the signs pictured, please see this site:

http://harappanwriting.piczo.com


Please tell us what you think

Name, website, and email are optional; if we publish your comment, your name will be shown, and may be linked to your website if provided, but the email you enter will not be published.





Captcha Image

Bookmark and Share

 

 


Recent Posts


Tags

haplogroup U Chromosomal Labs Bode Technology Chauvet cave paintings haplogroup N MHC Stephen Oppenheimer genetic determinism Eric Wayner Pueblo Indians Mark Thomas Science magazine mental foramen GlobalFiler Russia prehistory myths PNAS Melungeons Cajuns Abenaki Indians Alabama El Castillo cave paintings religion Great Goddess population genetics Roberta Estes Thuya rock art Irish history Harold Sterling Gladwin Y chromosomal haplogroups Henriette Mertz Phoenicians Bryony Jones Iran Zuni Indians Sinti Arizona State University haplogroup T haplogroup X Penny Ferguson Louis XVI Discover magazine Joseph Jacobs Jews and Muslims in British Colonial America England human leukocyte antigens Stone Age Early Jews and Muslims of England and Wales (book) Telltown FOX News human migrations forensics DNA Fingerprint Test N. Brent Kennedy EURO DNA Fingerprint Test Arabia Constantine Rafinesque Phillipe Charlier andrew solomon ethnicity Belgium Grim Sleeper Zionism Patagonia Phoenix Bigfoot Anne Marie Fine rapid DNA testing Caucasian research Micmac Indians Lab Corp population isolates human leukocyte testing Beringia Plato polydactylism Neolithic Revolution Fritz Zimmerman Harold Goodwin horizontal inheritance corn Peter Parham genealogy X chromosome Israel, Shlomo Sand Khazars Panther's Lodge Anglo-Saxons Ashkenazi Jews Cohen Modal Haplotype Roma People Hohokam Indians Shlomo Sand Cherokee DNA familial Mediterranean fever Harry Ostrer Pomponia Graecina Bill Tiffee Scotland ethics ISOGG Tintagel Moundbuilders Lebanon INORA epigenetics Arizona occipital bun Choctaw Indians linguistics microsatellites Cornwall Normans Leicester Maronites Jim Bentley Italy Celts Scientific American French DNA cancer Anasazi Sarmatians Marija Gimbutas Nature Genetics Barnard College Helladic art Colin Renfrew Europe Nova Scotia Bode Technology Rare Genes hoaxes Comanche Indians Navajo Rafael Falk DNA security National Geographic Daily News Khoisan Ireland Neanderthals Bentley surname research BBCNews health and medicine New York Academy of Sciences Rutgers University University of Leicester medicine Charles Perou India Pueblo Grande Museum George van der Merwede haplogroup J Abraham Lincoln Discovery Channel Michael Grant NPR Elizabeth C. Hirschman Bryan Sykes Britain Science Daily, Genome Biol. Evol., Eran Elhaik, Khazarian Hypothesis, Rhineland Hypothesis statistics Jone Entine Jewish genetics Akhenaten Svante Paabo hominids Genome Sciences Building Henry VII evolution Rush Limbaugh Sea Peoples Chris Stringer Russell Belk Richard Lewontin ethnic markers Riane Eisler First Peoples Gypsies Etruscans Colin Pitchfork Marie Cheng Middle Ages Jon Entine Wendy Roth Austronesian, Filipinos, Australoid Y chromosome DNA Nephilim, Fritz Zimmerman Asian DNA immunology Applied Epistemology HapMap Timothy Bestor Oxford Nanopore Egyptians FBI Smithsonian Magazine Gravettian culture North Carolina Cancer Genome Atlas bloviators clan symbols personal genomics Population genetics breast cancer Hopi Indians Richard Buckley Kate Wong Freemont Indians American Journal of Human Genetics history of science Nadia Abu El-Haj Arabic giants American history haplogroup B Barack Obama Dienekes Anthropology Blog Sam Kean Wales Native American DNA Test Gregory Mendel climate change Nature Communications Clovis Maya Algonquian Indians clinical chemistry Kentucky methylation Holocaust Michael Schwartz education consanguinity Solutreans New York Review of Books palatal tori Cleopatra North African DNA university of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Henry IV Terry Gross Sasquatch Philippa Langley Teresa Panther-Yates French Canadians ancient DNA Altai Turks Richard III National Health Laboratories Melba Ketchum John Wilwol Les Miserables Epigraphic Society Melungeon Union DNA Fingerprint Test mitochondrial DNA BATWING haplogroup E Tucson Middle Eastern DNA genetics mutation rate European DNA Jews Janet Lewis Crain Promega pheromones single nucleotide polymorphism surnames M. J. Harper Charles Darwin Chris Tyler-Smith genomics labs China Theodore Steinberg Turkic DNA Greeks Israel mummies Isabel Allende megapopulations George Starr-Bresette Basques Daily News and Analysis Havasupai Indians Alec Jeffreys Gila River Cave art DNA testing companies Stacy Schiff AP archeology Melanesians Columbia University news Melungeon Heritage Association Victor Hugo King Arthur African DNA Current Anthropology Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute Nikola Tesla Mary Settegast The Nation magazine Phyllis Starnes Acadians Paleolithic Age Native American DNA DNA magazine Kurgan Culture Jack Goins DNA databases Sorbs Tutankamun Life Technologies Bradshaw Foundation IntegenX DNA Forums anthropology Magdalenian culture cannibalism Pima Indians King Arthur, Tintagel, The Earliest Jews and Muslims of England and Wales Indo-Europeans far from the tree Majorca Tifaneg Gunnar Thompson race Albert Einstein College of Medicine Denisovans Wikipedia autosomal DNA Horatio Cushman seafaring Hohokam oncology Chuetas Salt River Finnish people Virginia DeMarce haplogroup H Donald N. Yates Tom Martin Scroft Keros

Archive