An academic maverick is challenging conventional wisdom on Canada's prehistory by claiming an archaeological site in southern Alberta is really a vast, open-air sun temple with a precise 5,000-year-old calendar predating England's Stonehenge and Egypt's pyramids. Mainstream archaeologists consider the rock-encircled cairn to be just another medicine wheel left behind by early aboriginals. Read more
An academic maverick is challenging conventional wisdom on Canada's prehistory by claiming an archaeological site in southern Alberta is really a vast, open-air sun temple with a precise 5,000-year-old calendar predating England's Stonehenge and Egypt's pyramids. Mainstream archaeologists consider the rock-encircled cairn to be just another medicine wheel left behind by early aboriginals. But a new book by retired University of Alberta professor Gordon Freeman says it is in fact the centre of a 26-square-kilometre stone "lacework" that marks the changing seasons and the phases of the moon with greater accuracy than our current calendar.
In a remote location west of Brooks, Alberta, scientist Gordon Freeman in 1980 discovered a Sun Temple that pre-dates Stonehenge. According to Freeman, it was constructed some 5000 years ago by the Oxbow People, and contains a solar calendar like ours, but slightly more accurate. He states that the site also contains a detailed lunar calendar. During field work in England from 1986 to 2006, Freeman found striking similarities between the surface geometries of Stonehenge and this site, findings which have far-reaching historical implications. These discoveries are carefully documented and interpreted in Gordon Freeman's new book, Canada's Stonehenge: Astounding Archaeological Discoveries in Canada, England, and Wales, launching February 4th.