Tablet removed from a burial mound in Muskingum County, Ohio that contained skeletons over 9 feet in length. With them was this tablet with a quote from the Bible. History of Muskingum County, Ohio 1882 I am the Alpha and the Omega, saith the Lord God, which is and which was, and which is to come, the Almighty ; giving first, -power on earth; secondly, the spirit, added from heaven without ending. The heavens declare the glory of God, as a seal of His -power to bless, first, with life, and forever, these servants. "I photographed for Dr. J. F. Everhart an engraved stone, said to have been exhumed from a mound in Brush Creek Township, and that I have this day identified the negative that I then took, in the Gallery No.1 Main street, Zanesville, Ohio; that when I was about to print the picture for Dr. Everhart I assured him I could, by retouching the negative, make the characters on the stone appear plainer, and that Dr. everhart objected, saying he wanted nothing more or less than an exact copy of the stone, with- out any alterations whatever, and that I am prepared to identify the stone from which the negative referred to was taken, and that there was no sign of any recent engraving or marking on the engraved side of the stone." The discovery that " Alpha and Omega " are the first two characters of the inscription was as startling as it is true. And the connection with the Great Pyramid, as indicated by the corresponding signs, " the angle stones," found onlyOn the Pyramids, and upon this gravestone, as far as now known, began to loom up, and Mr. Smyth's three keys for the opening of the Great Pyramid seemed to have a bearing upon this inscription ; so that they are here quoted for the benefit of the reader. The inscription on the tablet taken from the mound in Brush Creek Township is composed of three different forms of ideation, which are made out to be Demotic or Enchorial, Hieroglyphic and Greek. The Demotic, according to Herodotus, had ceased to be used 525 B. C. ; the Hieroglyphics had ceased to be used about the third century, A. D., and Greek characters were then used as ideations. The inscription, therefore, must be back to the time when one of these classes ceased to be used, which was 425 B. C. Source: thenephilimchronicles.blogspot.com
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