Lost cities and forgotten civilizations

Book - 2013

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930/Lost
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 930/Lost Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York : Rosen Pub 2013.
Language
English
Other Authors
Michael Pye, 1946- (-), Kirsten Dalley
Physical Description
261 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. 247) and index.
ISBN
9781448892518
  • Preface
  • Archaeological Scandals
  • Paradises Lost
  • The Cosmology of the Afterlife: Hamlet's Mill, the Star-Strewn Path, and the End of Days
  • Atlantis: The Lost Walhalla
  • Temples, Creator-Gods, and the Transfiguration of the Soul
  • Our Sonic Past: The Role of Sound and Resonance in Ancient Civilizations
  • Oppenheimer's Iron Thunderbolt- Evidence of Ancient Nuclear Weapons
  • From the Pyramids to the Pentagon: The U.S. Government and Ancient Mysteries
  • Race, Interrupted: Ancient Aliens and the Evolution of Humanity
  • Clash of the Giants: The Untold Story of the Lost Atlantean Race
  • The AB Intervention Hypothesis: The Truth Behind the Myths
  • The Micmac and the Picts: Distant Cousins?
  • UFO Cults: A Brief History of Religion
  • A Symbolic Landscape: The Mystery of Nabta Play a and Our Ancient Past
  • The Time Machines
  • Glossary
  • For More Information
  • For Further Reading
  • Index
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 7 Up-What do UFOs, the pyramids, and the lost city of Atlantis have in common? Apparently a lot. This book may sound like a conventional work on archaeological mysteries, but it is not. It is comprised of essays by different authors. Erich von Dniken, author of Chariots of the Gods (Putnam, 1968), a work that suggests that space aliens actively guided human history, is one of the contributors. The most down-to-earth articles discuss possible locations of Atlantis. Sometimes the articles contradict one another with their varied and fabulous alternative theories for the building of the pyramids and other ancient wonders; one author posits that ancient people could levitate giant stones with sound, while another states that aliens must have moved the giant stones. Von Dniken supplies the biggest problem to his own "Ancient Alien Astronaut Theory." Speaking about the construction of Stonehenge, he states, "But what is perhaps most baffling is that the Stone Age planners were able to think abstractly." In reality, there is nothing baffling about people in the Stone Age thinking abstractly, because they had the same capacity for abstract thought as anyone else in any age. This volume goes beyond other books in the genre of the "unexplained." A book about ghost stories from Gettysburg does not take away from the actual history of the Battle of Gettysburg, nor does a book about Bigfoot take away from the actual history of the Pacific Northwest. The Ancient Alien Astronaut Theory, however, does take away from actual history; it takes away from human history the achievements and struggles of actual human beings, many of whom labored and struggled in conditions unimaginable today.-Jeffrey Meyer, Mount Pleasant Public Library, IA (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.