As Terence Mckenna pointed out in his book The Archaic Revival, Gobekeli Tepe is one of the oldest known civilizations and they had no need for fortifications. They revered the mushroom and the human body.
(Thread) Gobekli Tepe had a skull cult (aka their religion), but nearby Çayönü Tepesi had a dedicated House of Skulls. A building crammed with over 450 bodies, inc 90 skulls, many with vertebrae still attached. A large altar stone with a flint knife soaked in human and animal blood completes the image.
Researchers at the Neolithic ritual center of Göbekli Tepe in Turkey have discovered this fragment of a human skull (below), one of three that were carved and altered after death, and possibly put on public display.
As Terence Mckenna pointed out in his book The Archaic Revival, Gobekeli Tepe is one of the oldest known civilizations and they had no need for fortifications. They revered the mushroom and the human body.
(Thread) Gobekli Tepe had a skull cult (aka their religion), but nearby Çayönü Tepesi had a dedicated House of Skulls. A building crammed with over 450 bodies, inc 90 skulls, many with vertebrae still attached. A large altar stone with a flint knife soaked in human and animal blood completes the image.
https://nitter.it/Paracelsus1092/status/1579352917412577282
OMG they altered it!
Researchers at the Neolithic ritual center of Göbekli Tepe in Turkey have discovered this fragment of a human skull (below), one of three that were carved and altered after death, and possibly put on public display.
It doesn't say that in there at all 🙄 😮💨
I didn't say it did.