Nordic Aliens and the Greek Gods of Africa: Through the Wormhole: Lost Civilizations, Oracles, Robots, and the Bird Language of the Gods by Lars Bergen & Sharon Delarose

Nordic Aliens and the Greek Gods of Africa: Through the Wormhole: Lost Civilizations, Oracles, Robots, and the Bird Language of the Gods by Lars Bergen & Sharon Delarose

Author:Lars Bergen & Sharon Delarose [Bergen, Lars & Delarose, Sharon]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Amazon: B082P7GHGG
Goodreads: 49216363
Publisher: Gityasome Books
Published: 2019-12-11T05:00:00+00:00


In other words, all the Earl had to do was whistle to set off a search and rescue party, even to the farthest parts of the county. While this doesn't prove a whistled language, it is suggestive considering how detailed a message one could send, describing what was lost and where to return it. Other whistlers would relay the message until it reached the borders of the province so that everybody was looking for the lost horse or cow.

A vague memory of this whistled language lingers in the place names of Ireland such as Whistling Hill and the Fort of Whistling, both named for the music of the fairies so often heard emanating from them.

Just like the mounds and deer milk legends that form connecting threads between ancient Ireland and North America, whistling legends arose in the same regions.

According to Mulhall's 1911 Vanished Civilizations, the extinct race of Mound Builders left behind burrows and ramparts in the Ohio and Mississippi Valley regions that resembled similar structures in Europe, Asia, Mesopotamia, and the British Isles, particularly in Ireland. Regarding the Mound Builders of North America, Mulhall said:

"These Mound Builders are supposed to have possessed one distinctive feature, the whistling or bird language. By a curious graded scale of shrill whistlings, they were able to converse over great distances.

"It was their need of a means of communication across long distances over the great ravines which caused the development of a system of crude signaling by whistling into a complete language.

"The art is still employed in the Atlas Mountains, and in Gomera, one of the smallest of the Canaries.

"The language is made up like a sort of Morse code, with high calls and low, short calls and long, with rising and falling inflections, and with a curiously articulated utterance, something similar to triple-tonguing on a cornet."



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