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Beschreibung
Across windswept plains, misty coasts, and forgotten valleys stand the megaliths-silent monuments of stone that defy time and explanation. From the vast circles of Stonehenge and Carnac to the underground chambers of Malta, from the spiraled carvings of Newgrange to the shattered blocks of Puma Punku, these sites are more than ruins. They are enigmas carved in granite, whispering of a science we no longer understand.
For centuries, archaeologists, explorers, and visionaries have asked: Who built them, and why? Were these monuments primitive ritual centers, or did they encode astronomical knowledge, acoustic harmonics, and geometric principles lost to history? Why do so many cultures-separated by oceans-share spirals, cup-marks, and sacred orientations toward the stars? Could sound itself have been a forgotten tool, shaping stone and altering consciousness?
In Megaliths and Lost Science, the stones are not treated as mute relics but as active archives of ancient memory. This book journeys through spirals and symbols, echo chambers and alignments, myths and suppressed discoveries, uncovering how these monuments may have preserved fragments of a forgotten world science. Drawing upon archaeology, archaeoastronomy, mythology, and emerging fields such as archaeoacoustics and cymatics, it challenges orthodox timelines while grounding its insights in cross-cultural comparisons and hard data.
Both rigorous and provocative, this work invites readers into the great debate between mainstream history and alternative visions of the past. It explores how colonialism and academic orthodoxy have shaped the way we interpret sacred sites, and how new technologies-satellite mapping, genetic research, acoustic testing-are reawakening questions long dismissed.
This is not a book of simple answers, but of necessary questions. The megaliths endure because they were built on more than stone. They were tuned to resonance, aligned with the heavens, and infused with meaning. Their silence is deceptive-for those who listen carefully, the stones still speak.
Across windswept plains, misty coasts, and forgotten valleys stand the megaliths-silent monuments of stone that defy time and explanation. From the vast circles of Stonehenge and Carnac to the underground chambers of Malta, from the spiraled carvings of Newgrange to the shattered blocks of Puma Punku, these sites are more than ruins. They are enigmas carved in granite, whispering of a science we no longer understand.
For centuries, archaeologists, explorers, and visionaries have asked: Who built them, and why? Were these monuments primitive ritual centers, or did they encode astronomical knowledge, acoustic harmonics, and geometric principles lost to history? Why do so many cultures-separated by oceans-share spirals, cup-marks, and sacred orientations toward the stars? Could sound itself have been a forgotten tool, shaping stone and altering consciousness?
In Megaliths and Lost Science, the stones are not treated as mute relics but as active archives of ancient memory. This book journeys through spirals and symbols, echo chambers and alignments, myths and suppressed discoveries, uncovering how these monuments may have preserved fragments of a forgotten world science. Drawing upon archaeology, archaeoastronomy, mythology, and emerging fields such as archaeoacoustics and cymatics, it challenges orthodox timelines while grounding its insights in cross-cultural comparisons and hard data.
Both rigorous and provocative, this work invites readers into the great debate between mainstream history and alternative visions of the past. It explores how colonialism and academic orthodoxy have shaped the way we interpret sacred sites, and how new technologies-satellite mapping, genetic research, acoustic testing-are reawakening questions long dismissed.
This is not a book of simple answers, but of necessary questions. The megaliths endure because they were built on more than stone. They were tuned to resonance, aligned with the heavens, and infused with meaning. Their silence is deceptive-for those who listen carefully, the stones still speak.
Über den Autor
Luke Caverns is an independent researcher, explorer, and former archaeology lecturer whose work bridges academic inquiry with field-based investigation. He began teaching archaeology in 2004, where he developed a reputation for bringing ancient civilizations to life through a combination of rigorous scholarship and a deep fascination with the mysteries of the past. From early in his career, Caverns was drawn beyond the traditional boundaries of the classroom. His interests expanded toward the great unanswered questions of human history-particularly the rise of the civilizations of the New World, the enduring enigmas of ancient Egypt, the monumental landscapes of Anatolia, and the global phenomenon of megalithic construction. These interests would eventually define his life's work.
Leaving formal academia behind, Caverns pursued a more immersive path, dedicating himself to both linguistic and field research. He undertook the study of Latin, Arabic, Spanish, and Quechua, equipping himself to engage directly with primary sources, regional histories, and local traditions across multiple cultural spheres. This linguistic foundation allowed him to move beyond translation and interpretation, opening a more direct connection to the civilizations he studies. His field experience includes participation in five archaeological excavations across South America, where he worked alongside researchers and local teams in environments ranging from high Andean plateaus to dense jungle terrain. These expeditions deepened his focus on pre-Columbian cultures, ancient trade networks, and the architectural achievements of early American civilizations.
Today, Caverns operates as a modern-day explorer, documenting and investigating little-known and often overlooked archaeological sites throughout Central America. His work combines on-site analysis, historical comparison, and a critical examination of both established and alternative interpretations of the ancient world. Blending the discipline of an academic with the curiosity of an explorer, Luke Caverns represents a new generation of independent researchers-one equally at home in ancient texts, remote landscapes, and the enduring mysteries of humanity's earliest civilizations.
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2025
Genre: Geschichte, Importe
Jahrhundert: Vor- & Frühgeschichte
Rubrik: Geisteswissenschaften
Medium: Taschenbuch
Reihe: Lost Worlds: Ancient Origins and History
ISBN-13: 9798231282401
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Caverns, Luke
Hersteller: Carmichael Press
Lost Worlds: Ancient Origins and History
Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, D-36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr@libri.de
Maße: 229 x 152 x 15 mm
Von/Mit: Luke Caverns
Erscheinungsdatum: 19.08.2025
Gewicht: 0,385 kg
Artikel-ID: 133882685