<
For nearly 30 years the tenured fossils of the Scientific
Establishment have adamantly denied that I've discovered petrified
bones, teeth and even soft organs (SOME HUMAN) between coal veins.
<
Physical anthropologists, paleontologists, archaeologists, geologists
-- birds of a feather who naturally flock together -- have adamantly
insisted they are nothing more than rocks or concretions.
<
The only problem is that a wide variety of state-of-the-art testing
has been performed on the most mind-boggling specimens -- those I
insist are human --and has proven otherwise, confirming they are what
I've long insisted they are.
<
You see, members of the scientific "academia" have absolutely no
desire to search for truth regarding man's origin and ancestry. All
they've ever wanted to do -- and did -- is protect their vested asses,
singing Glory Hallelujah about the mythology known as evolution.
<
So I think it's time that we step into the ring and conclusively
separate scientific truth from pseudoscience pablum by re-testing
the two specimens that American Medical Laboratories (AML)
determined contain dried blood.
<
A re-test would reveal that the prestigious lab is absolutely correct
(and so am I), that these two specimens are neither rock nor
concretion but, in fact, fossils of men (or women) who inhabited
the earth while coal was being formed 280 million years ago.
See, you can't find dried blood in a rock.
<
Now then, I hereby challenge the Scientific Establishment to put its
reputation where its mouth is and agree to have similiar testing done
before the eyes of the world, hopefully on live TV.
<
IF it refuses, you'll know it is as guilty as sin, a message I've
been
delivering for 29 years.
<
Undoubtedly upset about this challenge are the squirmin' vermin at
the
Smithsonian, at the University of California-Berkeley, at Penn State
University, at the University of Pennsylvania, at the Paleontological
Research Institute, at Harvard, at Temple -- and even at McGill and
Concordia universities in Montreal (and this list could go on and
on).
<
These Scoundrels of Science have long claimed that I'm a dreamer and
hallucinator, but the results of a re-test will establish conclusively
that my
accusations of their deceit, deception, conspiracy and collusion are
indeed correct.
<
Here are the two specimens to be re-tested:
<
http://www.edconrad.com/pics/z11calv.jpghttp://www.edconrad.com/pics/Skullx.jpg< and
http://www.edconrad.com/oldascoal/page3_files/body_data/skullb.jpg<
===================
<
The late Wilton M. Krogman, one of the world's foremost human
anatomists and author of the book, "The Human Skeleton in Forensic
Medicine," had personally examined and tested the top specimen and
identified it as calvarium, a human skull with the eye sockets broken
off.
<
The second specimen hardly needs an expert in comparative human
anatomy to tell us what it undoubtedly must be, since even a second-
grader can see the obvious similarity.
<
"COME OVER HERE, DOCTOR.
I WANT YOU TO SEE THE OLDEST HUMAN SKULL EVER FOUND."
-- Wilton Krogman to a colleague
<
http://www.edconrad.com/oldascoal/cmon_files/krogwskull.jpg<
Here is a copy of AML's report following testing of the specimen
which
Krogman identified as a human calvarium.
<
This URL also contains written confirmation of B-O-N-E during an
examination and testing of one of my specimens by Dr, Geoffrey
Bourne,
longtime director of Yerkes Regional Primate Research Center.
<
The URL reveals the results of scanning electronic microscopy (SEM)
photos of the surface features of one of the specimens found between
coal veins -- actually, an object that Krogman identified as a tibia
-- as well as a microscopic view conforming the presence of Haversian
canals, the tell-tale sign of bone.
<
http://www.edconrad.com/pics/TestResults.jpg<
TEST RESULT OF GRANULES REMOVED FROM
SKULL-LIKE OBJECT EMBEDDED IN BOULDER
<
Submitted by Physicians Clinical Laboratory
Hazleton National Bank Building
101 W. Broad St.
Hazleton, Pa. 18201
<
< OFFICIAL REPORT
< AMERICAN MEDICAL LABORATORIES
< Chantilly, Va.
<
51945059/0 Received: 04/08/2000
<
75843/Chantilly For Null
<
CALCULUS ANALYSIS BY CRYSTALOGRAPHY
<
The specimen consists of a few small pieces of dried blood. None of
the constituents normally found in urinary calculi are present.
<
*** FINAL REPORT ***
<
CP 978171-CS 84751
<
Nathan Sherman, M.D.
Director of Laboratories
<
================
<
If the Pseudoscientific Establishment agrees to this challenge --
which, of course, it won't --It'll finally establish beyond all doubt
that man IS as old as coal, evolution is a pipe dream and the so-
called "scientists" -- the sleazeballs -- involved in searching for
answers about man's true origin and ancestry are phonier than
a counterfeit $3 bill.
<
=====================
<
RESEARCH BY AN HONEST SCIENTIST
-- Lin Liangtai of Taipei, Taiwan --
<
http://www.edconrad.com/pics/z8femur.jpg<
http://wretchfossil.blogspot.com/2010/02/human-leg-bone-fossil-of-300-mya.html<
PROOF OF LIFE AFTER DEATH
http://www.edconrad.com/pics/Miracle.jpghttp://edconrad.com/lifeafterdeathand
MAN AS OLD AS COAL
http://www.edconrad.com<
=================
<
"We can forgive a child
who is afraid of the dark.
The real tragedy of life
is when men are afraid
of the light." -- Plato
<
=================
<
http://www.edconrad.com/oldascoal/index_files/body_data/quotesnew.gif<
========================
<
OTHER PETRIFIED BONES, TEETH,
AND SOFT ORGANS -- SOME HUMAN --
FOUND BETWEEN COAL VEINS
<
http://www.edconrad.com/pics/FINGERSx.jpghttp://www.edconrad.com/pics/Skullx.jpghttp://www.edconrad.com/pics/OldestHumanSkull.JPGhttp://www.edconrad.com/pics/z8femur.jpghttp://www.edconrad.com/pics/HumanBrain.jpghttp://www.edconrad.com/pics/HumanJaw3.jpghttp://www.edconrad.com/pics/PetrifiedPP.jpghttp://www.edconrad.com/pics/MoreFossils.jpgttp://
www.edconrad.com/pics/GallBladder1.jpghttp://www.edconrad.com/pics/GallBladder2.jpg<
HORSE OF A DIFFERENT FIRE DEPARTMENT
http://www.edconrad.com/images/inslate5.jpghttp://www.edconrad.com/images/inslate_mysterious.jpg<
http://www.edconrad.com/pics/InSlate3.jpghttp://www.edconrad.com/pics/InSlate2.jpghttp://www.edconrad.com/pics/InSlate11.jpghttp://www.edconrad.com/pics/Scorpion.jpghttp://www.edconrad.com/pics/FirstDiscovery.jpghttp://www.edconrad.com/pics/OldestTool.jpghttp://www.edconrad.com/images/inslate.gif<
================================
<
WHERE THESE BEAUTIES WERE FOUND
<
Here's a map showing a spectacular cross-section of coal veins
beneath Mahanoy City, Pa. It reveals the impact of an asteroid,
meteor or comet having struck the earth and offering the undeniable
physical evidence of a catastrophe.
<
Click on the URL to make it larger (or sprinkle lightly with Viagra).
<
< THE ANATOMY OF A CATACLYSM
< "Oh, the Humanity"
<
http://www.wretch.cc/album/show.php?i=lin440315&b=22&f=1472383101&p=61<
==========================
<
Ed Conrad takes a break while digging for petrified human fossils.
http://www.edconrad.org/oldascoal/page4_files/body_data/conradshovel.jpg<
Ed Conrad and his trusty Husky named Blue.
http://www.edconrad.com/pics/EdnBlue.JPG<
< PLEASE DON'T SAVE THE WHALE
http://www.edconrad.com/pics/SaveTheWhale.jpg<
=============
<
WORLD'S NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUMS
Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia
Alaska Museum of Natural History
Alaska State Museums, Juneau, Alaska
Albany Museum, Rhodes University, Grahamston, South Africa
The Raymond M. Alf Museum of Paleontology, Claremont, Calif
American Museum of Natural History, New York City, New York
Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum
Australian Museum Online
Australian National Botanical Garden
Berkeley Natural History Museums consortium, Berkeley, California
Bernice Bishop Museum, Honolulu, Hawaii
Bob Campbell Geology Museum, Clemson University
Buena Vista Museum of Natural History
Burke Museum, University of Washington, Seattle
The California Academy of Sciences
Canadian Museum of Nature
Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Centennial Museum, University of Texas at El Paso
The Notebaert Nature Museum, Chicago, Illinois
Chula Vista Nature Center, Chula Vista, California
Cincinnati Museum Center, Cincinnati, Ohio
City of Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History
Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Cleveland, Ohio
College of Eastern Utah Prehistoric Museum
Connecticut State Museum of Natural History
Cumberland Lodge, Museum, and Center for Leadership Studies,
Williamsburg, Kentucky
Dallas Museum of Natural History
Denver Museum of Nature & Science, Denver, Colorado
Johnston Geology Museum, Emporia, Kansas
Essig Museum of Entomology, University of California, Berkeley
Fernbank Museum of Natural History, Atlanta, Georgia
Fick Fossil and History Museum, Oakley, Kansas
The Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago
Finnish Museum of Natural History: Botanical Museum
The Florida Museum of Natural History
Georgia Museum of Natural History
Harvard Museum of Natural History
Haus der Natur, Cismar, Germany
Haus der Natur, Salzburg, Austria
The High Desert Museum, Bend, Oregon
Honolulu Community College Dinosaur Exhibit, Honolulu, Hawaii
Hooper Virtual Paleontological Museum, Canada
Houston Museum of Natural Science
Humboldt State University Natural History Museum, Humboldt,
California
Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery, Glasgow, Scotland
Illinois Natural History Survey
Illinois State Museum
Institute of Systematics, Evolution of Animals, Polish Academy of
Sciences
Kansas University Natural History Museum, Lawrence, Kansas
Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History
Louisiana State University Museum of Natural Science
Manchester Museum, University of Manchester, England
Massachusetts Museum of Natural History, University of Massachusetts
Milwaukee Public Museum, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Missouri Botanical Garden
Monterey Bay Aquarium, Monterey, California
Montshire Museum of Science, Norwich, Vermont
Musée de Minéralogie, Êcole des Mines, Paris
Musée d'Histoire Naturelle, Fribourg, Switzerland
Musée National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France
Musée National d'Histoire Naturelle,Luxembourg
Muséum d'Histoire Naturelle de Genève (Natural History), Geneva
Museo di Storia Naturale di Firenze, Firenze (Florence), Italy
Museo di Storia Naturale dell'Università di Pisa, Italy
Museo Mundo de Ambar, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales de Madrid
Museo Tridentino di Scienze Naturali, Trento, Italy
Museon, Den Haag (The Hague), Netherlands
Museum of Natural History - Cormack Planetarium, Providence, RI
Museums of Natural History, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Museum of Natural Sciences, Brussels, Belgium
Museum of Southwestern Biology, University of New Mexico
Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley
Museum of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia
National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution
Washington, DC
National Museum of Natural History: Naturalis, Leiden, Netherlands
The Natural History Museum, Berne, Switzerland
The Natural History Museum, London
Natuurhistorisch Museum Maastricht, The Netherlands
Natuurmuseum Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Neanderthal Museum, Mettmann, Germany
New England Aquarium, Boston, Massachusetts
The New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science
The New York State Museum
Nichols Arboretum, University of Michigan
North Carolina Museum of Life and Science
The North Carolina State Museum of Natural Sciences
Nova Scotia Museum
The Oakland Museum of California, Oakland, California
The Oklahoma Biological Survey
Oklahoma Museum of Natural History
Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History, Monterey County, Cal.
Paleontological Museum, University of Oslo, Norway
The Peabody Museum of Natural History, Yale University
Pratt Museum of Natural History, Amherst College
Provincial Museum of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
The Rankin Museum of American and Natural History
The Raptor Center, University of Minnesota
Redpath Museum, McGill University, Montréal, Qué., Canada
The Royal British Columbia Museum
The Royal Ontario Museum (ROM), Toronto
The Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology, Alberta, Canada
San Diego Natural History Museum, San Diego, California
Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History
Satrosphere , Aberdeen, Scotland
Senckenberg Natural History Museum, Frankfurt, Germany
Sierra College Natural History Museum
The Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History
St. Louis Science Center
Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde, Stuttgart, Germany
State Darwin Museum, Moscow, Russia
Birch Aquarium-Museum, Scripps Institute of Oceanography
Sternberg Museum of Natural History
Stoke-on-Trent City Museum
Mayborn Museum Complex, Baylor University
The Swedish Museum of Natural History
Tallahassee Museum of History and Natural Science
Tate Geological Museum, Casper, Wyoming
The Tennessee Aquarium, Chattanooga, Tennessee
The Texas Memorial Museum, University of Texas at Austin
Teylers Museum, Haarlem, The Netherlands
University of Alaska Museum, Fairbanks, Alaska
University of Alberta Museum of Zoology
University of California Museum of Paleontology
University of Colorado Museum of Natural History
University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology
University of Michigan Museum of Zoology
University of Michigan Exhibit Museum of Natural History
University of Nebraska State Museum, Lincoln, Nebraska
University of Oregon Museum of Natural History
University of Washington Fish Collection
University of Wisconsin-Madison Geology Museum
University of Wyoming Geological Museum
The Vanderbilt Museum, Centerport, Long Island, New York
The Virginia Living Museum, Newport News, Virginia
Virginia Marine Science Museum, Hampton Roads, Virginia
Virginia Museum of Natural History
Virginia Museum of Natural History, Virginia Tech branch
Voralberger Naturschau Dornbirn, Dornbirn, Austria
Worldwide Museum of Natural History
Wyoming Dinosaur Center, Thermopolis, Wyoming
Zoological Museum of University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
Zoological Museum of the University of Copenhagen, Denmark