Dna of the Gods: Origins of a Genus Extraterrestrial Biology Terrestrial Intelligence
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Dna of the Gods - Christopher Bertram
Anthropology
Chapter 1
Clinical Anthropology
I started out in anthropology, so to me how society works, how people put themselves together and make things work, has always been a big interest. - George Lucas
Figure 1. In this photo: Structures that go far into antiquity where the architecture, and building methods defy imagination and dating is unknown. The purpose of this is also unknown. (S. America).
Genomic Psychology
Although the archaeological record indicates a rough sketch of the development of modern Homo sapiens and the behavior of the species, we have now determined that the gene for speech has been handed down through the genomic sequence at the Genus level and that intelligence may originate far back in antiquity. These results have implications in human modeling of behavior, psychology and psychoanalysis.
Clinical anthropologists take a top-down approach (everything in a phylogenetic tree), one that could shake up the medical establishment. Strictly speaking, one could say that all of medicine is anthropology. The future is in clinical anthropology. Because artifacts have been misidentified, misunderstood, and miscataloged, the depth and antiquity of our intelligence has been misunderstood. The fossil record implying that H. sapiens is the only truly intelligent example of its genus may not be entirely accurate: the entire genus Homo may be intelligent, a recent discovery in clinical anthropology.
In recent genetic analysis it has been discovered that the gene for human speech was also in the neanderthal genome. In other words it could be thought of that language itself may have a basis far into antiquity in the past even into a species that primarily lived 30,000 years ago.
Nucleotides form the basis of chromosomes. Humans are diploid; this means they have forty-six chromosomes. Human hominid genomes are 99 percent identical, with 1.5 percent of known genes; these currently total approximately twenty-two thousand.
It is not now generally known that language or human behaviour had a basis in a previous hominid. In fact medicine assumes everyone is human and human behaviour started in Victorian England. It is now thought that humans began cataloging human psychology in Freud’s couch.
What are we dealing with here? Let’s look at the history of medical research. The collegiate system began with the granting of degrees in divinity provided by the church. It wasn’t until the advent of treating plague victims that colleges began to train medical doctors. Of course, we don’t suggest here that one type of inquiry transform into the other.
Medicine had a choppy beginning. For example: some medical inquiry started with artists creating illustrations of muscles so that they could paint the human form, which led to the discipline of anatomy. To fill in the details of the history of medicine, one must take an overview of whole subject and recognize contributions from other disciplines.
For example, let’s say you are a doctor. You have a patient in the emergency room. The medics, paramedics, or emergency medical technicians bring a patient into the nurse’s station. A nurse or doctor performs emergency triage on the patient, making a determination of his or her priority. The patient may or may not be assigned a room. After treatment, the patient is discharged or sent to a ward for recovery or the morgue.
In the write-ups of the process, nowhere does the current system allow for speciation of the individual. We all assume that everyone is a member of H. sapiens. That is to say that no one runs genetic tests to determine where on the phylogenetic tree the patient lands relative to human beings. Why not?
It seems logical that a phylogenetic tree analysis be performed on every individual so that the treatment phase could include genetic therapy or even the use of stem cells. Shouldn’t the placement of treatment consider how far out of Africa the individual came to arrive at his or her present condition? In terms of genetics, those individuals whose ancestors left Africa earlier are now different in physiology than those whose forebears remained longer. Individuals do actually fall on slightly different places in the phylogenetic tree.
Think of a row of numbered blood samples with no other labels on them. They can be tested to determine the sex ratio of all of the blood samples’ donors. The approximate age of the individuals can be determined. One might even determine the social standing of the individuals. Next we could analyze blood type and antigens, and so on. The test tubes could be classified according to the so-called races of the donors.
The modern medical paradigm still works on the apprentice system of on-the-job-training. Interns have the latest schooling but no experience yet, and the surgeons have long ago left their exams behind but have built great on-the-job experience. Psychiatrists have theories of human behavior. Pathologists test all manner of samples, usually post mortem, when it is too late. This operation of industry is doomed to failure.
Clinical anthropology is the study of cultural beliefs and the consequent behaviors associated with the origin, management, and recognition of both health and illness within various cultural and social groups. The field goes further to handle cases outside the bracket of medical diagnosis and treatments such as biomedicine. These include issues in dealing with the informal systems of health care within a global perspective. Clinical anthropology considers treatment by healers, traditional birth attendants, alternative practitioners, and shamans as well as the health practices associated with professional Western medicine and caring practices. This field engages with cultural diversities in health and disease as well as the shared beliefs, practices, and images associated with the perception of the human mind and body.
Clinical anthropology relies on several important methods and techniques such as DNA analysis from extracts from archeological specimens, which has been very instrumental in answering several anthropological questions in the medical field.
This technique’s complex procedures require specialized and very extensive training to carry out. It must be carefully planned with proper input from archeologists, linguists, physical anthropologists, and other related researchers. Some well-preserved samples can produce very clear answers to the questions in a way that may complement other types of analysis.
DNA typing can identify individuals since DNA is unique among individuals except in the very few cases of identical twins. Skeletal remains are important to DNA analysis of populations or specific individuals. Reference specimens for DNA comparison can be obtained from very close family members to seek solutions for specific health problems.
Forensic DNA Identification
Revolutionary molecular techniques in DNA identification are now available in the medical field. The procedures for rapid DNA sequencing were developed in the early 1970s. The Southern blot technique was developed a couple of years later. The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was developed in 1985. These techniques have become important in the fragmentation and amplification of DNA strands. These molecular biologic techniques have since moved from the research laboratories into the clinical service laboratory for the control and maintenance of several conditions in the health and fitness sector.
DNA analysis has also spread into the forensics department in most hospitals and the governmental justice and law systems. Fingerprinting has also been developed in this forensic category. Many research papers have been published in this field; the identification of human remains is one of the most important operations in forensic science. In America, the Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory (AFDIL) has been at the forefront of identifying human remains and thus a major contributor in assisting the federal government in attaining its mandate in the courts and legal system.
MTDNA Sequence Identifications
MtDNA sequence identification was developed by Dr. Mary-Claire King in the early 1970s to address the identification of the disappeared in Argentina. She matched the mtDNA sequences of the children whose parents had been killed in political turmoil. She even went further, identifying their maternal grandmothers. In 1991, Dr. Mark Stoneking described the use of this technique in the identification of a skull found in the Mojave Desert about three years after a young girl was reported missing. Another milestone in this field was the experiment by Dr. Gill in 1994 identifying the Russian Romanov Tsar Nicholas II and his entire family. The AFDIL first employed the mtDNA sequencing in the identification of the skeletal remains of servicemembers who were killed in a Southeast Asian conflict. AFDIL has been performing the testing that has led to the identifications of the others (Johanson, 2009).
Skeletal Remains
Recovered remains from Southeast Asia vary drastically in their quality and quantity. Some remains are virtually complete, whereas others have disintegrated or dissolved in the acidic soils. This phenomenon is affected by the manner and duration of interment, environmental temperature, and acidity of the soil. Changes in environmental conditions may cause extreme differences in the rate of preservation of fossils in the burial sites.
Bone specimens from Southeast Asia harbor only a very small percentage of fragmented mtDNA; the amount found is very unpredictable. The quality and ease of extraction of genetic information from the bone varies with location within the human skeleton. Teeth may yield mtDNA when a bone from the same skeleton does not.
MtDNA in family reference materials can be obtained from the exhumed remains of deceased relatives if necessary. At times, post-mortem reference specimens like locks of hair, paraffin-embedded materials from the earlier biopsies, and neonatal blood stains can be compared with information from the deceased, as was done with the identification of relatives to the servicemen in the war at the Southeast Asia (University, 2009).
Ancient DNA
For proper DNA identification, the researcher must use a very intact DNA sample. This calls for better preservation of such samples. We should follow the correct extraction process right from the start. A new approach in the field is the amplification of DNA obtained from ancient biological materials like those of mammoths, tigers, and mummies. This is the field of molecular paleontology. Once the victims in the Korean and Vietnam conflicts were identified using these techniques, they could receive proper burial later in their respective areas of residence (wsu.edu, n.d.).
Clinical anthropology may offer solutions to the dysfunctional and often overpriced and wasteful medical system. An anthropologist might run a hospital quite differently, putting the pathologist at the beginning of a treatment’s chain of events instead of at the end. A cultural anthropology workup would be part of the initial assessment as well as the plan for treatment. Where is the patient from: The inner city, the suburbs, and the rural area with roads that have no names? What has the diet and level of exercise been for this patient over the last six months, a year, three years? Where on the phylogenetic tree does the individual fall? Everything would be based upon clinical testing, first and foremost.
The current mental picture of the antiquity of modern humans has colored our operations of the medical establishment; however it is through the modern discoveries in the genome that we have found the true nature of the aspects of our intelligence. These insights are true and may lead to improving ourselves in medical practice.
[Formal proposal for scholastic research and funding here]
[Confidential]
References
Hominid Species Timeline.
Retrieved Jun 10, 2009. http://www.wsu.edu:8001/vwsu/gened/learn-modules/top_longfor/timeline/timeline.html
Johanson, D. C. Origins of Modern Humans: Multiregional or Out of Africa?
Retrieved Jun 10, 2009. http://www.actionbioscience.org
University, R. 1.5 million-year-old fossil humans walked on modern feet.
Retrieved Jun 10, 2009. http://www.phys.org
Chapter 2
Ancient History
The extremely ancient site of Sigiriya, Sri Lanka. It may once have been entirely carved; it may have had a facade that featured a Griffin or other mythical creature which, perhaps, was destroyed in an ancient battle.
The tablets of the Ten Commandments were ripped out of the Temple of Heliopolis and brought to Moses on the mountain.
-Ancient Mystery Schools of Hermes
The New Narrative
Homo sapiens long ago began using tools and language, perhaps inherited across the species but still in the genus Homo. With the discovery of the gene that codes for speech in both modern humans and Neanderthal, we can infer that there were at least two hominids that possessed the gift of speech. We can date DNA far into antiquity, but corresponding archaeological finds are few. What could they tell us about our ancient minds?
Our history goes far into antiquity, with evidences that stretch so far back that it goes into other hominid species. Many of the data points have not been connected, and many mysteries exist while some could be solved with existing evidences.
Records show that in ancient Rome, bull after bull had to be sacrificed to the god Jupiter until it was done correctly. Any deviance from proper procedures resulted in heavy fines and possibly death. During a wedding in the bible there appears to not be a description of an appropriate bull that was sacrificed.
The emperors of Rome usually considered the Jews a quaint little cult, but one might think of the punishment of the Rabbi Jesus as being a sacrifice to a Roman deity. Thusly; one of the first emperors of Rome may have given the order to sacrifice Jesus the rebel rouser instead of the bull or in place of a bull that should have been sacrificed for the wedding described in the bible, that lacked a bull sacrifice.
One wonders at the curriculum, and training of Jesus during the missing years of his life. He was given certain privileges at birth from the three wise men of the East which may have included secret mystery schools.
One such training lasts 12 years on the side of a Tibetan mountain. The seeker is brought bowls of rations while he tries to free himself from karma.
The ascetic sits cross legged on a mat. For 12 years he calms his body in silent meditation freeing him from cycles of birth, growth, and decay. He becomes a monk of deep contemplation.
A guru passes ancient knowledge on to the initiate. From the first enlightened one down to the next each initiate is given the knowledge until he is ready to walk the Earth as a lama in his own right.
Finally after 12 years of contemplation and only porridge Jesus must have been ready to start his ministry. They must have given him all of the knowledge of the ancients and then turned him loose on the world. Jesus was the new lama of the time.
I think that lamb of God
may be a reference to lama.
A revolutionary Jewish rabbi from Israel who ministered from the ages of thirty to eighty years old is buried in Kashmir who bears the marks of a Roman crucifixion. The rabbi appeared in Kashmir from the Silk Road in the year 30 a.d.
Their originator, Christ, had been executed in Tiberius’ reign by the governor of Judea, Pontius Pilate
(Tacitus, 110 a.d.).
Back in Rome they were picking up the pieces from a new sect that had been created by the supposed execution of the rabbi Jesus. The aftermath was being felt immediately.
Punishments [by Nero] were inflicted on the Christians, a sect professing a new and mischievous superstition
(Seutonius, 120 a.d.).
Meanwhile: Rome was busy building a huge military dictatorship. The architecture of many developments cannot be duplicated today and many mysteries still remain to be resolved.
There is a point of contention to the Roman aqueducts. Mostly they are impossible and ford rivers that have water running in them and go on in nonsensical directions and span in ridiculously ominous proportions.
Observing aqueducts in France today there is a given, yes the concrete cannot be duplicated today, but the apparent blueprints and directions really boggle the mind. The same slope in a gravity fed system from the mountain tops into the cities is used for the water supply.
The Roman dictator at the time, from Spain, had a Greek architect, who constructed the most fantastical public works projects in the history of the world that has never been duplicated.
The published works by the architect were later found and lead to the Italian renaissance. The works are so complete in several volumes many of the teachings and drawings are used to this very day.
De architectura was written by Marcus Vitruvius Pollio a Greek civil engineer who was employed by Gaius Octavius the Roman emperor also known as Augustus. The emperor Trajan is also known for creating huge expansions in public works as the empire grew, using the principles of De architectura.
What is fascinating is that some aspects of the temple of Jupiter in Baalbek Lebanon, not only have elements that predate the site which are called Cyclopean architecture but even the construction by the Romans defy modern architecture. The ancient Romans have secrets of construction still a mystery to this day.
Some have suggested that these ancient gods were in fact wandering around with humans at the time. The temple of Jupiter stands today with massive structures that boggle the mind. It may be not only the temple of Jupiter but a temple from Jupiter.
In this photo: Kerri Taylor in a dramatic re-creation of the Roman bath, requiring aqueducts of monumental proportions to furnish a water decedent society of luxury (Photo credit: Author 2015).
In This Photo: Sarah Jain in dramatic reenactment of ancient Troy. A variety of gods staged an intervention at Troy leading to the creation of Rome (Photo credit: Author 2015).
Let’s look back in time: after the battle of Troy, the remnants fled to the coastline of what is now Italy and formed a rudimentary society (Rome). The god Ares and Athena were probably important not only in the proceedings of Troy and the aftermath but the subsequent city-state of Rome. Eventually, this society created the Roman Empire, which was in essence a military dictatorship.
A recent theory suggests a World War Zero:
"Now, as Colin Barras at New Scientist reports, a geoarchaeologist named Eberhard Zangger is proposing a much grander cause for the collapse: an extended series of ancient conflicts that he dubs World War Zero.
Last week, Zangger, head of the Luwian Studies foundation, which is based in Zurich, Switzerland, launched a book, as well as an extensive website, arguing that another culture he calls the Luwians began a series of invasions that eventually collapsed the other Bronze Age powers.
(http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/geoarchaeologist-proposes-there-was-a-world-war-zero-180959152/#l3KGvS4ro3p16T6U.99)"
Further back, at 1450 BCE, the volcano at or near the island of Thera destroyed the Minoan fleet and empire. The depth of ash there indicated a massive explosion. Written language has been excavated that some believe to be evidence that the Minoan Palace of Knossos and its temples underlie the mythological island civilization of Atlantis. So much research and excavation at Thera has now taken place that some consider the mystery of Atlantis solved.
In This Photo: Descendants of the B4’5 genotype still making baskets in the old Southwest of the United States. Navajo made basket from New Mexico territory. (Photo credit: Author 2016).
Anthropological gene testing for mtDNA has shown that some haplogroups started out in Asia and migrated to the Americas far back in antiquity. For Haplogroup B, starting at 50,000 years ago, humans migrated from Asia to the Americas and became B4’5. We have so far no archaeological finds in the Americas to corroborate the move; no finds there date earlier than 10,000 years ago. However, deep-water ports visible with side-scanning radar indicate that in the far-distant past, someone was traversing the oceans in huge ships of unknown provenance. There are also indications of land-bridge crossings from Siberia to Alaska, for example.
Mediterranean Island Voyages
Science 16 November 2012:
Vol. 338 no. 6109 pp. 895-897
DOI: 10.1126/science.1228880
"Some of the classical world’s most innovative cultures developed on Mediterranean islands, but their earlier human use is poorly known. The islands, particularly those further from the mainland such as Crete and Cyprus, were thought to have been first