The ancient Sume understands the solar system before telescopes?

It was not until August 1986, Voyager 2, the interplanetary exploration ship launched by the United States in 1977, began to send the first close-up images of Neptune, the eighth planet in the system. Sun. But before 6,000 years, the ancient Sumerians " knew it ."

Picture 1 of The ancient Sume understands the solar system before telescopes?

Solar system.The inner word is Glass, Venus, Earth, Mars, Moc Tinh, Saturn, Thien Vuong Tinh, Hai Vuong Tinh and Pluto.

Scientists at the Thrust Laboratory in Pasadena, California, have found a lot of amazing data while exploring the photos sent by Voyager 2. First, the color of Neptune shocked the scientists. It was a pale blue sphere with some white clouds. Second, the planet's rotating axis is tilted at an angle, showing that it has a nucleus of liquid, hot and strong magnetic fields.

Based on data and images sent by Voyager from the Uranus border in 1986, as well as information on Jupiter and Saturn sent by the ship earlier, humans were able to look deeper into solar system in a completely different way than before.

However, are we the first to observe the furthest planets in our solar system?

Linguist and historian Zachariah Sychin believes that data from Voyager simply confirms his first published predictions in a book titled The 12th Planet, published in 1976.

Sychin also believed that the data obtained from the probe was consistent with the texts of the ancient Sumerians - documents written 6,000 years ago. The Sume civilization emerged in Mesopotamia (part of present-day Iraq) about 4,000 BC. According to Sychin, the Sumerians invented the wheel, the furnace of earthenware and the irrigation system. More importantly, they invented the basic concepts of astronomy.

They used cuneiform writing to describe their findings on clay tables, figurines and stone rolling bars, by carving up symbols and drawings. Real photos were created when people rolled these stones onto soft clay.

Sychin has been studying articles on the Sume civilization for over 30 years. One day, he found a rare roller bar in a museum in West Berlin. In addition to the image of a god giving a plow to humans, the scroll bar also displays an amazing map of the sky, showing planets with the sun in the center. In total, this graphic contains 12 planets, including the sun and the moon.

Sychin was amazed to see the picture of the Uranus that Voyager 2 sent back in January 1986. The Sumerian description of the planet - mash.sig, means " bright green " - fitting almost completely with the greenish picture of Uranus on the television screen. Sychin's translation of the Sumerian " hum.ba " description , read " swamp vegetation ".

He believes that demonstrates the presence of a semi-liquid material discovered on Neptune three years later. The Sumerians regard Uranus as the twin brother of Neptune. The data obtained by the probe seems to confirm this view. Unlike Uranus, Neptune's color is blue. The planet has a strong magnetic field, a hot, half-liquid mass and plenty of water.

The question is: how can the Sumerians know these things at a time when telescopes and satellites have not yet been born?

Sychin claims he can answer this question. According to him, the Sumerians received secret advice from strangers living on planet Nibiru - the 12th planet between Jupiter and Mars. These people are said to visit the earth every 3000 years.

" You can see that in the texts including the myths about Anki and the earth ," Sychin said.

Andy Cheng, a researcher in the second Voyager contact group, admitted that there are many similarities between the " twin " planets of Hai Vuong and Thien Vuong Tinh. However, he believes that any planet (except Earth) cannot survive if it is in the solar system, because then its distance will be too close or too far away for life to Nurtured.

Also according to Cheng, the ancient Sumerian scroll bar may contain only a stylized image of some random star without implying an accurate diagram of the sky. Francesca Roshberg-Halton, a leading expert in the Sumerian at the University of Notre Dame, commented more heavily: " worthless ". " Cuneiform characters can be transcribed in an excessive way. Sometimes, some experienced decoders also make things mess up. Nothing like that is the Sumerian astronomy. " , she said.

According to Roshberg-Halton, Sychin's research has made a few mistakes. " The Sumerians know only seven planets including the sun and the moon. Therefore, 12 planets are useless. The brightest star at the center of the picture is not the sun, but Venus. " , she said.