Ica stones

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The Ica stones are a collection of andesite stones alleged to include ancient depictions of dinosaurs and advanced technology. They were reportedly discovered in a cave near Ica, Peru.

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[edit] Discovery

The Ica stones were popularized by Dr. Javier Cabrera, a Peruvian medical doctor who received an engraved stone as a birthday gift in 1961. Cabrera identified the engraving on the stone as a stylized depiction of an "extinct fish" that was thought to have lived millions of years before. The discovery caught the attention of Carlos and Pablo Soldi, two collectors of artifacts who had failed to interest the archaeological community with their findings, but who found an interested party in Cabrera, to whom they sold 341 similar stones. Cabrera soon found another supplier, a peasant named Basilio Uschuya, and from these and other sources, Cabrera collected over 15,000 engraved stones over the following thirty-five years.

[edit] Description

The stones depict a wide variety of scenes: dinosaurs (attacking or helping humans), advanced technology, advanced medical operations, maps, and even pornography. While there is a degree of ambiguity to them, they display definite knowledge of things that are wholly anachronistic. They have caught the attention of many people inclined to question aspects of modern science, and Creationists and others have used the Ica stones to argue against prevailing scientific theories.

Cabrera attempted to resolve the many scenes into a narrative, and from there to decipher a history of the civilization he believed to have made the stones. He believed that the ancient technology belonged to what he called Gliptolithic Man, an extraterrestrial race which supposedly arrived sufficiently long ago to coexist with the dinosaurs and genetically engineered modern man. Some time afterward, they left to another planet (utilizing the nearby Nazca lines as a spaceport) before some unspecifiec catastrophe occurred.

[edit] Authenticity

The stones are reported to have been found in caves and stream beds. Because they are rocks and contain no organic material, Carbon-14 dating cannot be used. It is not known whether any other method of radiometric dating has been applied to the stones. Because the locations of their discovery have not been disclosed, it is impossible to estimate their age based on nearby geological strata. Furthermore, even a confirmation of the rocks' age would not prove that the engravings upon them had not been produced at a later date.

Neil Steede, an archaeologist who was investigating the Ica stones for The Mysterious Origins of Man (a film which attempted to make the case that humans had existed far earlier than previously thought), said that he found no patina on the engravings but that the rocks themselves showed patina, suggesting that the engravings are indeed younger than the rocks.[citation needed]

In 1998, Spanish investigator Vicente Paris declared after four years of investigation that the evidence indicates that the stones are a hoax. Among the proofs presented by this investigator were microphotographs of the stones that showed traces of modern paints and abrasives. The strongest evidence of fraud as claimed is the crispness of the shallow engravings; stones of great age should have substantial erosion of the surfaces.[1]

[edit] Uschuya recantation

In 1977, during the BBC documentary Pathway to the Gods, Uschuya produced a "genuine" Ica stone with a dentist's drill and claimed to have produced the patina by baking the stone in cow dung.[citation needed]

In 1996, another BBC documentary was released with a skeptical analysis of the stones and the newfound attention to the phenomenon prompted the authorities of Peru to arrest Basilio Uschuya, as under Peruvian law it is illegal to sell archaeological discoveries. Uschuya recanted his claim that he had found them and instead claimed that they were hoaxes he and his wife had created. He was not punished, and continued to sell similar stones to tourists as trinkets.[citation needed]

He also confirmed that he had forged them during an interview with Erich von Däniken, but later recanted that claim during an interview with a German journalist.[citation needed]

In 2000, Spanish Journalist J.J. Benitez goes to Ocucaje and Convinces Uchuya of showing him where he discovered the stones, during a TV broadcast in Spain Benitez discovers 9 new stones. He also publishes the book "Planeta Encantado, La huella de los Dioses.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Paris, Vicente. Las piedras de Ica son un fraude. www.fraudesparanormales.com. Retrieved on 2008-02-03.

[edit] References