Thursday, February 25, 2016

Apalache-Creek Writing System most Similar to that of Central Vera Cruz

 






















What is fairly evident is that writing systems sprang up throughout the Global Atlantean  trade community which operated until its demise from 2500 B through 1159 BC.  As evident the idea inspired local variants everywhere rather than a universal system.  This impulse driven by the extingencies of language was natural if otherwise not helpful in terms of preserving information.


Here we have a similar situation arising through the connection between colonies in the SE USA and Southern Mexico.  All this informs us that Mexican civilization did spread to a lodgement in the SE USA as was natural.


All good stuff.  The SE and by extension, the Mississippi was a blank slate until this work began to properly identify the peoples involved.  As crazy we have thousands of ignored Lake Superior artifacts conforming to the Minoan culture because no one will accept Minoan providence.  The moment that happens an army of European scholarship will impact our knowledge hugely.
 
.
Apalache-Creek writing system most similar to that of Central Vera Cruz


http://peopleofonefire.com/apalache-creek-writing-system-most-similar-to-that-of-central-vera-cruz.html

In the mid-1920s, a team of archaeologists led by Warren Moorehead, explored the Etowah River Valley in northwest Georgia. They obtained a treasure trove of artifacts for Harvard’s Peabody Museum. Most of these artifacts have never been seen by the public. They are either stored in boxes or were donated to financial backers of the museum.

Fortunately, Moorehead either photographed or drew several of the artifacts containing indigenous art for his book on Etowah Mounds. Many of the shell gorgets and copper sheets contain abstract glyphs. Several of these glyphs also appear on boulders in the Southern Highlands. Well-l-l they appear somewhere else too . . . on Epi-Olmec stone tablets and art in Central Veracruz. 

Epi-Olmec was an ethnic label developed by Mexican archaeologists to describe the indigenous cultures that followed the disappearance of the Olmec Civilization around 500 BC. These peoples returned to a much more egalitarian lifestyle. Between around 500 BC and 250 AD they displayed the most Olmec cultural traits, then began being influenced by other major civilizations in Mesoamerica. They no longer lived in large cities or hauled massive boulders long distances to carve sculptures. Throughout the Classic Period (250 AD – 900 AD) these descendants of the Olmecs, such as the Zoque, continued the same modest lifestyles. In fact, their towns and villages would have been little different than Muskogean counterparts in the Southeastern United States.

The Epi-Olmec Cultural region roughly spanned from the Yamapo (now Jamapo) River southward to the Tuxtla Mountains. Yamapo means “Place of the Yama (small farms)” in Chontal Maya. Yama is also the actual name of the Mobile Trade Jargon language and apparently is the root of the word Yamasee.

The writing system used by the Epi-Olmec peoples was simpler and more abstract that either Olmec or Classic Maya systems. Linguists are still trying to translate Epi-Olmec, however. Below is a sample of Epi-Olmec writing. It is known as the Cascajal Tablet. One can even see some Epi-Olmec glyphs on the Squirrel Mountain Tablet, featured in the previous article.

 


Several of these symbols appear on the Squirrel Mountain, Track Rock and Judaculla petroglyphs. Many appear on the art of Etowah. Many of the indigenous peoples of Central Vera Cruz were scattered to the winds by invading Nahua-speaking barbarians and later, their descendants, the Aztecs. Mexican anthropologists are still trying to determine their fate.

The original Creek Migration Legend, discovered in April 2015, after being lost 280 years, provided a direct geographical tie between Central Vera Cruz State and the Kashete (Cusseta) Creeks of the Southern Highlands. The Kaushete were indigenous to the region east of the Orizaba Volcano. After being persecuted by blood thirsty Mesoamerican civilizations, they migrated up and down the Yamapo River, looking for a safe place to live. They called this river, “The Bloody River.” Even today, the Yamapo or Jamapo is stained red from iron oxide on the slopes of the volcano. The Kaushete eventually took the Great White Path to Southeastern North America. This ancient highway has recently been discovered by Mexican scientists, using infrared images and LIDAR scans.


 

The Jamapo River in central Vera Cruz State, Mexico flows off the slopes of Orizaba Volcano. The Epi-Olmec glyphs are just part of the story of the Apalache-Creek writing system, however. One also sees many symbols straight out of Classic Maya writing or Post Classic Itza Maya script. All of the Maya glyphs can be translated right now. For example Boulder Six at Track Rock Gap has Maya glyphs. It announces, Great Sun, Lord Kukulkan (Quetzalcoat). Also, most of the glyphs on shell gorgets originating from North Georgia are also pure Maya and can be translated. Yet, on the other hand, by the time when we now think Maya commoners were coming to the Southeast (800-1000 AD) several Maya glyphs were also being used by peoples in Central Vera Cruz.



There is also another element to this writing system that remains a complete mystery. On the Squirrel Mountain petroglyphs, one can see small abstract symbols. Are they grammatical marks, determining verb tense, plural nouns and gender? We don’t know.

Lots of work will be done in order to complete this particular quest!

No comments: