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Coast to Coast AM - July 22 2009 - Atlantis, Cayce, & Artifacts

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This is a re-upload of the original post found here on ConCen:

http://tracker.concen.org/torrents-details.php?id=8503

Full Details:

Date:
07-22-09

Host:
George Noory

Guests:
Gregory Little, Bart Kosko

Expert on the American prophet Edgar Cayce, Greg Little discussed new discoveries in the search for Atlantis, mounds in ancient America, as well as findings in Egypt. He related the research of British science writer Andrew Collins who found an opening into a cave complex that extends underneath Giza, Egypt. Collins has concluded that the pyramids on the Giza Plateau correlate to the constellation Cygnus, rather than Orion, as other researchers have claimed.

Little shared some of Edgar Cayce's readings on Atlantis, and talked about the organization A.R.E. built around his work. Cayce believed Atlantis was a large empire that stretched from the Straits of Gibraltar to the Gulf of Mexico. Its inhabitants were able to generate electricity by focusing the sun's rays through crystals, and had flying machines, elevators, submarines, and hi-tech houses. Their civilization, Cayce said, suffered three great cataclysms-- in the years 50,000 BC, 28,000 BC, and 10,000 BC. He also thought they kept an archive of their knowledge, the now hidden Hall of Records.

Little talked about some intriguing underwater structures photographed off Bimini (see article below) that he's been researching. These remnants might have been buildings from a booming maritime port from around 10,000 BC, he said. He also touched on his work finding crashed planes in the Bermuda Triangle, and his long term study of Native American mounds, some of which date back as far as 3800 BC. Where some of these ancient mound builders came from is a complete mystery, he noted.

Future Brain Technology

First hour guest, Prof. Bart Kosko talked about efforts to create an artificial brain, which are said to be 10 years away. Such a brain, would not approach the complexity of a human's but might be useful for medical/pharmaceutical testing, he said. A future device called a "brain comb" made with nanotubes may be able to take a kind of brain print of memories that would be a unique identifier similar to a fingerprint, he added.