Hi João,

Very well put. This will go into my Reference box where I store very well
written emails.

Thank you,

Tish


On Mon, Sep 9, 2013 at 2:47 AM, João Ventura <j...@venturas.org> wrote:

> Hi Cindy.
>
> Addressing your points, and why I think this pseudo-science pyramids
> doesn't hold.
>
> Regarding continental drift, there is nothing to say.. The Azores are
> located on top of the rift between the North American, Eurasian and the
> African plates. There's no drift involved here. The rift is where the
> mantle is moving apart, and because of that, the mantle is thinner at that
> point, with lots of magma chimneys almost up to the surface. From time to
> time, one of those has enough pressure to release the magma into the
> surface, in the form of volcanoes that when dormant look like peaceful
> beautiful green islands. The geological time scales here are not compatible
> with continental drift being a factor. If you study the DNA evidence,
> you'll see that mankind started in Africa, moved into Europe and Asia, and
> only moved into North America (and then South) during a time when it was
> possible to walk from Siberia to Alaska (search for Aleutian land bridge).
> That's measured in tens of thousands of years. Continental drift is
> measured in much wider timescales (millions of years).
>
> As to early discoverers, you have two options:
> 1. Early discoverers, that find the place based on pure chance, and then
> leave, never coming back. There's evidence that such processes occurred
> with Europeans in North America at different points in time (Vikings,
> Portuguese and others). Granted, these are nice footnotes, but amount to
> nothing. They didn't populate the land, so the same land is up to be
> re-discovered by others. The same process may have happened to the Azores,
> as proven by their appearance in maps in the 1300s.
> 2. Settlement efforts based on know-how on getting there. For something
> like this, the discoverers have to go prepared, taking with them some
> supplies for the trip and early settlement, and most important men AND
> women :) To get to the Azores you need to have either repeatable random
> luck or the ability to know your location when sailing far from land.
> Ruling out the first one (which apparently enabled the Polinesians to
> settle Hawaii), you're left with having to wait for Prince Henry to found
> his sailing school in Sagres. Also, the Atlantic is not the Pacific.
> there's a reason for the latter's name.
>
> A place like the Azores, once settled would remain settled. You have lots
> of fresh water, fertile earth, trees to build shelter and fishing boats.
> It's undisputed from the recorded history that the Azores islands were not
> populated at the time of their discovery by the Portuguese in the 1400s.
> Even if they were discovered before, those people didn't stay, they either
> turned back or went on and were lost somewhere else. The Canary islands,
> which can be seen while still seeing the African coast were settled before
> this time. Madeira and the Azores require more advanced sailing techniques
> and remained uninhabited until their settlement by the Portuguese. Note
> that apart from some references in 14th century (early 1300s maps), there's
> no evidence at all in the ground that those places were settled before.
> Even discounting that anything useful left would have been cleared by later
> settlement efforts, there's no trace of any Phoenician, Greek or Roman
> presence there. It seems idiotic to you, but you need to explain why the
> island wasn't inhabited by 1000s of native Azoreans on the arrival of the
> Portuguese and why they had to recruit settlers from mainland Portugal to
> colonize the Azores. You have a choice between two puzzles: why no one
> settled them (easy to explain) or why did all the pre-1400 settlers build
> only a couple of pyramids and then vanished without a single trace. The
> last scenario is so complex to explain that the simple explanation is that
> it never existed in the first place.
>
> I'm fairly certain that these pyramids were investigated by the UNESCO
> scientists that declared them to be World Heritage monuments, and their
> association with the wine culture is well known. Those pyramids were built
> to protect the wine culture which was started by the early settlers.
> Unfortunately, these pyramids are made of volcanic rock.. The carbon-14
> dating would only tell from which volcano eruption they originated from.
> The good thing is that wine is the sort of stuff you grow only when you've
> already taken care of a lot of other needs, and you moved from survival to
> civilized mode.
>
> Unfortunately, certain people see a pyramid, and they immediately start
> thinking of ancient cultures and aliens, deeper meanings and conspiracy
> theories. The only problem is when they call themselves scientists and
> manage to get their crazy ideas published in normal newspapers. If you're
> waiting for further evidence on this case, you'll probably find them all
> coming from this one source. They probably started by searching for
> Atlantis and now stumbled on this crazy hypothesis. I'd say their next step
> is to claim that these pyramids are proof that Atlantis was in the Azores,
> because if they were growing wine, they had to have a larger settlement in
> the vicinity. How unfortunate for the Atlantes that their only remains was
> a couple of vineyards.
>
> Joao C. Ventura
>
> On Sunday, September 8, 2013 3:25:11 AM UTC+2, Cindy D wrote:
>>
>> I find this article fascinating as well Elaine.  I can't look away until
>> all the evidence is in which I may never live to see.  I've read about
>> science people quibbing and even murdering over things since the dawn of
>> time.  Prove this, prove that.  So I'll be curious to see what comes of
>> this.
>>
>> I know this seems idiotic, but at no time can I buy it that no humans
>> prior to the 1500's ever inhabited any of the Azores.  As the article
>> claims, it's a puzzle.  A puzzle is something to be solved. Historically
>> people seemed to want to move in a westerly fashion, so I would think, or
>> at least hope, seafaring peoples stumbled upon the beautiful islands.  Even
>> the ancient Egyptians had giant barges they sailed on, and Romans as well
>> who stretched their conquering arms all the way to England in the first
>> century.   No one ever ran into an Azorean island and stayed?  That's a
>> head-scratcher. And I have no clue how the islands shuffled around for
>> thousands of years with the continental drift.
>>
>> I suppose someone must have done testing on the recovered artifacts to
>> determine age, either radiocarbon 14, or potassium-argon or uranium-lead or
>> fire up the mass spectrometry accelerator and get some geotimelines
>> going. There are answers to this puzzle.  I'm going to go look some stuff
>> up on this to see what I can find.
>>
>> And yet, In the dark recesses of my dreams, it gives me great joy to
>> think that the Azorean islands could be vestigages of the possible lore of
>> Atlantis.  Anything is possible.
>>
>> CindyD
>>
>>
>>
>> On Friday, September 6, 2013 6:19:25 PM UTC-5, E Sharp wrote:
>>
>>> This is REAL interesting.
>>>
>>> http://www.algarveresident.**com/0-54889/algarve/azores-**
>>> pyramids-puzzle<http://www.algarveresident.com/0-54889/algarve/azores-pyramids-puzzle>
>>>
>>> "E"
>>>
>>>
>>>
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-- 
sfig
Researching
Island: Santa Maria
Freguesia: Santa Barbara

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