First Pictorial Representation Of Göbekli Tepe Found

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Remember to 'Subscribe' and click the 'bell' icon to get notifications of new videos: https://www.youtube.com/megalithomaniaUK. A tiny bone plaque in Sanliurfa museum holds the key to the orientation of 11,500 year-old temple complex. New article by Andrew Collins here: http://bit.ly/1KojxOs and here http://grahamhancock.com/collinsa4/. The bone plaque was found during routine excavations at the 11,500-year-old site of Göbekli Tepe in southeast Turkey, but no one had recognised exactly what the carved lines on the small bone plaque showed. That was until Matthew Smith, a British telecommunications consultant living in Qatar, visited Sanliurfa’s new archaeology museum with Megalithomania and Andrew Collins, just 8 miles (13 kilometres) away from Göbekli Tepe itself. He saw something that everyone else had missed, and this was that the little plaque – just 6 cm by 2.5 cm in size, and no more than 3-4 mm in thickness – bore on its upper surface two T-shaped features like the T-shaped pillars found in profusion at the site.

Filmed on Megalithomania's 'Origins of Civlization Tour'.
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