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THE INCREDIBLE MYSTERY OF THE MIHIRUNGS AT GOBEKLI TEPE
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Drawing No. 1 represents what Australian Aborigines called ‘mihirungs’, a bird of the Dromornithidae family, similar to the ostrich and emu, which lived only in Sundaland and Sahuland, or as we say today, Australia. It could reach 3 metres in height and 500 kilograms in weight. They are described as ‘giant carnivorous geese’, who lived between 35,000,000 and 20,000 years ago.
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Drawing 2 represents a painting of two “mihirungs” found in Arnhem Land, northern Australia. According to several scholars this painting is at least 40,000 years old, and was made by an ancient Australian population, probably Aborigines.
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Drawing No. 3 is located in Göbekli Tepe, Turkey. It is pillar No. 33 of the stone circle ‘D’. At the top of the pillar there are four birds that look very much like mihirungs. This stele is at least 12,000 years old.
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Drawing No. 4 is a detail of the Vulture Stele in Göbekli Tepe. It shows a small headless man next to an enormous bird. In size and shape the bird looks very much like a “mihirungs”. This stele is also 12,000 years old.
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How is it possible that in Göbekli Tepe, i.e., in present-day Turkey, people knew of a bird that only lived in Australia, and which had been extinct for at least 10,000 years by the time these stelae were engraved? Had there been cultural contact between the peoples of Sundaland and the civilisation of Göbekli Tepe? And who were the ‘headless men’ depicted in the last stele riding a ‘mihirungs’?
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This mystery is explained in the book:
12,794 Years ago – The visitors of Göbekli Tepe
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