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The discovery of late twentieth century mød man

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 August 2017

Dyån Phåknø
Affiliation:
Moesgård Institute of Archaeo- and Asteropsychology
Edwød Rhødz
Affiliation:
Moesgård Institute of Archaeo- and Asteropsychology

Extract

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Greetings! We who now salute you from the year 2986 are members of the species Homo tachyones, the first human generation to learn how to use the tachyon. Naturally, following this discovery, the immediate question arose, “To what great purpose shall we put this knowledge?” After much deliberation, we decided on the interesting experiment of communicating about some of our more puzzling archaeopsychological discoveries with the subjects of those discoveries themselves, back in the distant and hitherto inaccessible past.

Type
Chapter 12: The Etcetera of Astronomical Seismology
Copyright
Copyright © Reidel 1988 

References

Benford, G., 1980. Timescape (Simon and Schuster, New York, U.S.A.)Google Scholar
Bibby, G., 1974. The Grauballe Man (Forhistorisk Museum, Moesgård, Denmark).Google Scholar
Glob, P.V., 1969. The Bog People - Iron-Age Man Preserved (Macmillan, London, England).Google Scholar