Volume 49 - No. 11
By Friedrich Gomez
Several millennia before the ancient Egyptian pyramids were even built, San Diego’s prehistoric inhabitants, known as Kumeyaay Amerindians, roamed the region now known as San Diego County. And of these early prehistoric inhabitants of San Diego – we are still unraveling startling insights never before imagined. The Paper - 760.747.7119
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March 14, 2019
ANCIENT ASTRONOMERS & SCIENTISTS.
Hard archeological evidence now paints a shockingly new picture of San Diego’s indigenous people, revealing that some were far beyond being merely hunters and gatherers. According to Dr. Anthony R. Pico, world-renowned authority on Native American history, the
early Kumeyaay inhabitants in the San Diego County region were far more advanced than initially thought – they were early scientists, astronomers, horticulturists, and healers. Dr. Pico’s views are a shared consensus among the most august experts in the scientific community, especially in the study of “ a r c h a e o a s t r o n o m y. ” (Archaeoastronomy is defined as such: “The multi-disciplinary study of how prehistoric
Ancient Astronomers - See Page 2
people have understood the phenomena in the sky and how they used this astronomical knowledge in their cultures.” WHEN MAMMOTHS AND MASTODONS ROAMED SAN DIEGO.
According to San Diego’s Natural History Museum, mammoths and mastodons, the “Titans of the Ice Age,” were early prehistoric residents of