“We start with a comparison between the only female figure discovered at
Göbekli Tepe,
and a rock painting depicting a well-known creator being from Arnhem
land, Yingarna.
The likeness between these two images is immediately striking; we
recognise similar posture with the same positioning of the legs and breasts,
cartoonish exaggeration of the female genitalia, and clearly inhuman heads”.
Whilst in the following article, Bruce Fenton manages to draw some amazing
comparisons between Australian aboriginal art and that found at Göbekli Tepe, I (Damien Mackey) would neither accept his dating (his evolutionary views),
or his belief that the aboriginals were at Göbekli Tepe only after having been in Australia. Göbekli Tepe first, I would suggest,
and then, some time later, the great southern continent.
Bruce Fenton writes:
A Global Aboriginal Australian Culture? The Proof at Göbekli Tepe
A
Global Aboriginal Australian Culture? The Proof at Göbekli Tepe
(Originally
published in New
Dawn Magazine, July 2017)
Scientists and independent
researchers have publicly speculated on the purpose of the mysterious Göbekli
Tepe megalithic complex in southern Turkey. The question that the experts seem
unable to address is the identity of the builders. Having completed an in-depth
investigation of human origins and early migrations, it is now appropriate to
reveal my extraordinary findings – Göbekli Tepe is the product of Aboriginal
Australian culture. The identification of the builders will likely be
considered very controversial, as it should because this represents a major
paradigm shift.
Göbekli Tepe is the largest
well-dated megalithic complex of the pre-pottery period. There may be other
megalithic sites of greater antiquity, but none matches the complexity, scale
and advanced knowledge revealed at this site.
In 1994, Klaus Schmidt of the
German Archaeological Institute began excavations at a Neolithic hill site in
what is today southern Turkey (formerly Armenia). Beneath the hill was the most
extraordinary archaeological site yet uncovered, remarkable for both its
immense size and incredible antiquity.
By BRUCE FENTON
Images of Göbekli Tepe.
top: Beginning stages of the archaeological dig plus location map. middle:
Aerial view. above: Researcher Alistair Coombs standing next to one of the
massive T-shaped stone pillars.
Göbekli Tepe is an arrangement
of at least two hundred T-shaped stone pillars of up to 6 metres in height and
22 tonnes in weight. The pillars are covered with imagery. The recognised
boundaries of the complex include over 22 acres of land.1 The
physical aspects of the Göbekli Tepe archaeological site are quite amazing, but
its dating astonished researchers. The pillars of Göbekli Tepe have stood for
at least 12,000 years, 10,000 of those underneath a huge pile of soil
deliberately placed over them.
Göbekli Tepe is not some lone
anomalous site, existing outside a greater context. Archaeologists recognise
around 40 archaeological sites sharing the cultural signature observed at
Göbekli Tepe. These discoveries cover a vast area within the Mesopotamian
region. Scientists have also identified a correlation between the distribution
of ancient sites and the presence of wheatgrasses.
There has been significant
debate on the purpose of the Göbekli Tepe constructions. Mainstream academics
tend to suggest it was a ceremonial site. The plethora of stylised animals on
the pillars, alongside many anthropomorphic beings, is certainly reminiscent of
known shamanistic traditions. The strongest argument put forward by the
academics is that a form of ‘bird shamanism’ was observed by the local culture.
Some members of the Göbekli Tepe research team have gone as far as to speculate
that crane dances may have been performed there.2
Leading voices in the
independent and alternative archaeological research community have offered
their opinions on Göbekli Tepe. In his recent book Gobekli Tepe Genesis of the Gods: The Temple of the Watchers and
the Discovery of Eden, Andrew Collins finds agreement with the
proposed bird-shamanism link. Collins connects biblical tales to the site,
including the ‘Garden of Eden’ and the mysterious ‘Watchers’. His work also
suggests that a pre-historic Polish population, the Swiderian culture, might be
the builders. In his bestselling book Magicians
of the Gods: The Forgotten Wisdom of Earth’s Lost Civilization,
Graham Hancock gives significant space to an analysis of Göbekli Tepe. Hancock
details a possible astronomical interpretation of animal symbols on pillar 43,
suggesting these images represent recognisable constellations. Pillar 43 is
regarded in his work as a snapshot of the sky at the time of a cometary impact
event.
Dr. Robert M. Schoch, an
associate professor at the College of General Studies, Boston University,
briefly discusses Göbekli Tepe in his book, Forgotten
Civilization: The Role of Solar Outbursts in our Past and Future.
Dr. Schoch is well-known for his attribution of the Egyptian Sphinx to a lost
civilisation that existed around 9,000 years ago. Göbekli Tepe offers support
for Schoch’s existing hypothesis that a megalithic culture existed during the
pre-pottery period. He suspects that the deliberate burial of Göbekli Tepe
followed the onset of cataclysmic solar storms.
These three heavyweights all
agree the site was at least in some significant part an astronomical
observatory and that it offers compelling evidence for an advanced civilisation
that fell foul to a forgotten catastrophic event. They also see obvious links
between the dating of Göbekli Tepe and the Younger Dryas climate events.
Briefly, the Younger Dryas period is marked by sudden intense cooling 12,800
years ago followed by equally sudden and intense warming 11,500 years ago.
Archaeological evidence suggests that at both ends of the Younger Dryas global
cataclysms occurred that led to mass extinctions.
Certainly, the megalithic
builders responsible for Göbekli Tepe lived through the collapse of their
civilisation and decided to bury their work. It is evident their culture went
into rapid retreat, and today it only remains in the region of origination [sic]
– Australasia. The stones of Göbekli Tepe speak, but only if one knows
their language. These mighty megaliths bear the signature of the Australian
Aboriginal traditions from which they emerged.
The fingerprints of this
culture remain across much of northern Australia, but lest anyone raise the
accusation of regional cherry-picking, the focus here will be almost entirely
in one area, Arnhem Land.
Carved on exposed
megalith at Gobekli Tepe – Image Credit: Verity Cridland
Arnhem land is no arbitrary
selection for investigation. Situated on the closest point to the Indonesian
islands, Arnhem Land was once part of lands that extended much further out into
the Timor Sea and the Arafura Sea. Migrants moving towards Southeast Asia would
have passed through what is now Arnhem Land.
Yingarna is a female,
humanoid, personification of a rainbow
serpent, one of the powerful entities from Aboriginal mythology
(Dreaming Lore).
The female rainbow serpent is
responsible for seeding humanity across the landscape, while the male rainbow
serpent is responsible for shaping much of the landscape.5 George
Chaloupka, the foremost expert on the rock art of Arnhem Land, informs us that:
The belief in the Rainbow
Snake, a personification of fertility, increase (richness in propagation of
plants and animals) and rain, is common throughout Australia. It is a creator
of human beings, having life-giving powers that send conception spirits to all
the waterholes. It is responsible for regenerating rains, and also for storms
and floods when it acts as an agent of punishment against those who transgress
the law or upset it in any way. It swallows people in great floods and
regurgitates their bones, which turn into stone, thus documenting such events.6
Until very recent historical
times, all traffic was one-way, moving out of Australasia not inwards. This
fact has been well established in multiple genetic studies and indicates that
any truly ancient cultural elements are indigenous to Australia.3 There
is also some evidence that the flooded lands of the Sahul and Sunda plates,
shown in the maps on page 62, were once home to an advanced megalithic culture,
eventually swallowed by the rising sea. Arnhem Land would have formed part of
this lost culture’s territory and is likely to retain elements from it. This
region also boasts an extensive wealth of ancient rock art, some of which dates
to 45,000 years before present.4
We start with a comparison
between the only female figure discovered at Göbekli Tepe, and a rock painting
depicting a well-known creator being from Arnhem land, Yingarna. The likeness
between these two images is immediately striking; we recognise similar posture
with the same positioning of the legs and breasts, cartoonish exaggeration of
the female genitalia, and clearly inhuman heads.
The belief in the Rainbow
Snake, a personification of fertility, increase (richness in the propagation of
plants and animals) and rain, is common throughout Australia. It is a creator
of human beings, having life-giving powers that send conception spirits to all
the waterholes. It is responsible for regenerating rains, and also for storms
and floods when it acts as an agent of punishment against those who transgress
the law or upset it in any way. It swallows people in great floods and
regurgitates their bones, which turn into stone, thus documenting such events.6
In the traditions of Arnhem
Land peoples, Yingarna is said to have arrived on the eastern shores of the
continent, emerging from the ocean. Yingarna carried many bags with her, each
containing spirit children and yam seeds. We can see these bags in a second
rock art painting (see above). Note her extremely narrow and serpentine body
atop which sits the same strangely shaped head we saw in the previous painting.
The only facial features are two huge eyes.
Wherever Yingarna travelled,
she seeded human populations, giving to each group a bag containing their
culture and language. Before moving onwards, Yingarna would teach the newly
founded communities how to farm yams.7
The Rainbow Serpent takes many
forms, not only humanoid and serpentine but also sometimes a bizarre chimaera
incorporating elements of multiple animals and plants. In the above bark
painting, we see Yingarna with a feathered head, fishtail and sprouting many
strange mushroom-like appendages. These strange growths are Australian yam
plants with distinctive heart-shaped leaves.
above: Pillar56 in Enclosure H
at Göbekli Tepe shows multiple large-bodied birds with long necks. These bird
images are almost identical to emus represented in rock art from Arnhem Land.
above right: Another pillar with emu-like birds.
top right: Artist depiction (by Nobu Tamura) of Genyornis newtoni, a now extinct, large, flightless bird that lived in Australia.
right: Two examples of Genyornis painted on 40,000-year-old Arnhem Land rock art
above right: Another pillar with emu-like birds.
top right: Artist depiction (by Nobu Tamura) of Genyornis newtoni, a now extinct, large, flightless bird that lived in Australia.
right: Two examples of Genyornis painted on 40,000-year-old Arnhem Land rock art
If we look again at the
engraving of the female figure from Göbekli Tepe, we see it has one of
Yingarna’s yam leaves as her head. This parallel in iconography, across such a
vast distance, is nothing short of stunning. (image credit: Ben Gunn).
If we return to Göbekli Tepe’s
iconic pillar 43, we see this column includes depictions of both serpents and
bags. Three bags are given the most prominent position of all – right at the
very top. The snakes depicted on the relief sport swollen heads, making them
resemble mushrooms. This is a common element of snakes engraved around the
compound.
If we take a closer look at
one of the serpents depicted at Göbekli Tepe, on a stone artefact (see page
63), we see the exaggerated head. It is evident the artists tried to make it
clear these are not common snakes.
The yam-leaf-shaped heads
remind us immediately of rainbow serpent iconography. If we take a glance at
the painting of Yingarna with her bags we recognise the same bulbous head with
prominent eyes. If we were to add two arms to this snake engraving, and placed
a few bags around the neck, we would have a perfect replication of
Yingarna. The builders of Göbekli Tepe were living during a time of global
catastrophe, a significant part of which involved flooding, animal extinctions
and assumedly forced relocations. With immense changes happening in their
world, it may be that Göbekli Tepe represents their strenuous human effort to
reverse the declining environmental situation. The images at Göbekli Tepe are
mostly animals; it is tempting to think that this represented a significant
effort by the shamans to call forth the spirits of the animals, many of which
had become extinct. The second part of this project would have been an effort
to placate spiritual beings associated with flooding, such as the rainbow
serpent. Snake images are everywhere at Göbekli Tepe. Birds are another
well-represented animal form at Göbekli Tepe. At the very bottom of pillar 43
we see a large bird head attached to a very long neck, we do not see the body,
but it looks rather like an emu. Large flightless birds appear elsewhere, most
notably on pillar 56 where we see representations of multiple large-bodied
birds with long necks. These bird images are almost identical to emus
represented in rock art from Arnhem Land. These large birds may, in fact, be
Genyornis, an emu-like bird that went extinct around 30,000 years ago.
Similarities are evident when we look at a rock art depiction of Genyornis from
a site in Australia’s Northern Territory. The emu holds a very special place in
Aboriginal astronomy, associated with the dark rift of the Milky Way.
The second part of this
project would have been an effort to placate spiritual beings associated with
flooding, such as the rainbow serpent. Snake images are everywhere at Göbekli
Tepe. Birds are another well-represented animal form at Göbekli Tepe. At
the very bottom of pillar 43 we see a large bird head attached to a very long
neck, we do not see the body, but it looks rather like an emu. Large flightless
birds appear elsewhere, most notably on pillar 56 where we see representations
of multiple large-bodied birds with long necks. These bird images are almost
identical to emus represented in rock art from Arnhem Land. These large birds
may, in fact, be Genyornis, an emu-like bird that went extinct around 30,000
years ago. Similarities are evident when we look at a rock art depiction of
Genyornis from a site in Australia’s Northern Territory. The emu holds a very
special place in Aboriginal astronomy, associated with the dark rift of the
Milky Way.8
It is especially interesting
to note that pillar 56 includes an eagle grabbing a giant serpent in its talons
with smaller serpents depicted beneath. In some of the many Aboriginal flood
stories, it is the eagle that halts the progression of the rising seas. The
flood is a punishment for human misbehaviour, and only after humans agree to
correct their behaviour does the eagle step in and end the mounting cataclysm.
The eagle also has a prominent role in Aboriginal astronomy, linked to both
Altair and the Southern Cross.9
It is not only at Göbekli Tepe
that we find this Aboriginal Australian symbolism. Contained in the greater
body of research work is a far broader picture. After the cataclysms, new
sprouts of civilisation emerged from cultural seeds planted by a lost Aboriginal
Australian global culture. Aboriginal Australasians have carried the hidden
history of this first culture through comet impacts, solar storms and
deliberate genocide. Today we owe them an enormous debt. The sacred art of
Aboriginal Australians provides a final few cultural connections between the
builders of Göbekli Tepe and Aboriginal Australia. In these photographs, we see
an exact match between a symbol on an Aboriginal elder’s chest and one on a
pillar at Göbekli Tepe (see page 65). The meaning of this is often suggested to
be of two people sitting to share knowledge. On a central pillar in
enclosure D, we find a set of symbols normally reserved for the most sacred
artefacts of the Australian Aboriginals, churinga
stones. A modern example of a churinga stone is shown on page 65.
The only difference from the symbol on the pillar is that the two lines do not
merge with the central circle. Churinga stones are regarded as receptacles for
spiritual energy associated with creator beings, sky heroes that came down to
Earth. Incredibly, the full pillar on which this churinga symbol appears is
itself described as a stylised representation of a humanoid deity. We see the
mysterious being’s arms folded just above the belt (see image on page 65).10
Bruce Fenton is the author of
the new e-book The Forgotten Exodus:
The Into Africa Theory of Human Evolution. He presents a compelling
case for his new evolutionary hypothesis that Homo sapiens evolved first in Australasia, not Africa.
Order through the links on his website www.brucefenton.info/
into-africa-theory/
© Copyright New
Dawn Magazine, http://www.newdawnmagazine.com.
Permission granted to freely distribute this article for non-commercial
purposes if unedited and copied in full, including this notice.
….
FOOTNOTES
- ‘Gobekli Tepe: The World’s First Temple?’ by Andrew Curry, Smithsonian Magazine, Nov 2008
- “Dances with Cranes” – Animal masquerade in Pre-Pottery Neolithic ritual, https://tepetelegrams.wordpress.com/2016/11/14/danceswith-cranes-animal-masquerade-in-pre-pottery-neolithic-ritual/
- ‘Aboriginal mitogenomes reveal 50,000 years of regionalism in Australia’, Nature 544, 180–184 (13 April 2017)
- ‘Arnhem Land find proves to be rock art of ages’ by Caroline Herbert, ABC News, 19 Jun 2012
- aboriginalartonline.com/culture/rainbow.php
- George Chaloupka, Journey in Time: The World’s Longest Continuing Art Tradition, Reed, 1993
- bluethumb.com.au/thommo-nganjmirra/Artwork/yingarna-creation-mother
- Genyornis newtoni, Australian Museum, www.australian museum.net.au/genyornis-newtoni
- ‘Bunjil’ by Carolyn Briggs Boonwurrung, Culture Victoria, www.cv.vic.gov.au/stories/aboriginal-culture/meerreeng- an-here-is-my-country/bunjil/
- Tjurunga: Art and Religion, www.britannica.com/topic/tjurunga
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