August 19, 2006 (Press Release) --
Ever since the discovery in the 1920s that radiation causes mutation in DNA, the heredity material of life itself, scientists have wondered what role high energy cosmic rays might have played in evolution. Now a new book by science and history writer Andrew Collins provides stunning evidence that cosmic rays not only accelerated evolution, but were responsible also for the emergence of both civilization and, incredibly, even organized religion.
In THE CYGNUS MYSTERY, published by Watkins Publishing on October 15, Collins shows that Cygnus is the oldest known constellation in the world, being represented as a bird on a pole within the Lascaux cave in southern France some 17,000 years ago.
At Gobekli Tepe in Southeast Turkey, an 11,500-year-old stone temple - the oldest anywhere in the world – was found also to be aligned to this same constellation.
It is the same story with ancient stone and earthen structures worldwide, from the bird effigy mounds of North America to the Olmec centres of Mexico, the Incan sacred city of Cuzco, the Egyptian Pyramids of Giza, the Hindu temples of India to Avebury, the largest stone circle in Europe - all reflect an age-old interest in Cygnus.
Now new evidence suggests that the arrival of unique cosmic particles from a black hole or neutron star in the Cygnus constellation might explain why we evolved so quickly in Palaeolithic times, and adopted Cygnus as the cosmic source of life and death.
‘In the 1980s particle physicists using proton decay detectors in both Europe and the USA detected previously unknown particles deep underground,’ Collins asserts. ‘They came from a powerful cosmic ray accelerator known as Cygnus X-3, which in 2000 was confirmed as our galaxy’s first blazar, a black hole or neutron star spewing our jets of plasma and particles like some unimaginable cosmic gun barrel aimed at the Earth.’
Cygnus X-3 now becomes the best candidate by far for the changes in human evolution during the Palaeolithic age, leading to the rise of civilization and the foundations of organized religion worldwide.
In THE CYGNUS MYSTERY, published by Watkins Publishing on October 15, Collins shows that Cygnus is the oldest known constellation in the world, being represented as a bird on a pole within the Lascaux cave in southern France some 17,000 years ago.
At Gobekli Tepe in Southeast Turkey, an 11,500-year-old stone temple - the oldest anywhere in the world – was found also to be aligned to this same constellation.
It is the same story with ancient stone and earthen structures worldwide, from the bird effigy mounds of North America to the Olmec centres of Mexico, the Incan sacred city of Cuzco, the Egyptian Pyramids of Giza, the Hindu temples of India to Avebury, the largest stone circle in Europe - all reflect an age-old interest in Cygnus.
Now new evidence suggests that the arrival of unique cosmic particles from a black hole or neutron star in the Cygnus constellation might explain why we evolved so quickly in Palaeolithic times, and adopted Cygnus as the cosmic source of life and death.
‘In the 1980s particle physicists using proton decay detectors in both Europe and the USA detected previously unknown particles deep underground,’ Collins asserts. ‘They came from a powerful cosmic ray accelerator known as Cygnus X-3, which in 2000 was confirmed as our galaxy’s first blazar, a black hole or neutron star spewing our jets of plasma and particles like some unimaginable cosmic gun barrel aimed at the Earth.’
Cygnus X-3 now becomes the best candidate by far for the changes in human evolution during the Palaeolithic age, leading to the rise of civilization and the foundations of organized religion worldwide.

New scientific evidence indicates that cosmic rays accelerated human evolution during the Stone Age, giving rise to civilization and worldwide religion
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