The Secrets Behind The
Great Serpent Mounds Of Ohio
By James Donahue
Adams
County, Ohio, offers the site of the Great
Serpent Mount, considered by archaeologists and historians to be the most dynamic and mysterious effigy mount in the United States.
Measuring almost a quarter
mile in length, the twisting, winding mound built in the form of a massive snake swallowing an egg, is believed to be among
the largest serpentine earthworks in the world.
It is a surviving earthwork,
but it may not have been the only serpentine mound of its kind that once existed in Ohio.
Another similar to it once was said to have existed in Warren County,
located in Southwest Ohio between Dayton and Cincinnati.
George Frederick Wright, in an article published in 1908, described the mound as 1,300 feet in length, three feet high and
from 10 to 15 feet in width. Even when he saw it, Wright said erosion from a nearby stream had destroyed the head. Since his
article appeared, the remains of the mound have been destroyed by human encroachment.
Also in Warren County, John R. White, professor of Anthropology
at Youngstown State
University, wrote that in the 1980s he examined two large stone effigies
of rattlesnakes along the Little Miami River. He said they were made of flat shaped limestone slaps piled about two feet high
and two meters wide. One was 86 feet long and the other measured 152 feet.
It was White’s
theory that the snake effigies were made by the Fort Ancient prehistoric Indian culture that lived in the region around A.D. 1200. Also,
because of the remains of a post hole in front of the heads of the snakes, White believed that posts were used like a sun
dial, with a shadow moving down the backs of the snakes, to mark the summer and winter solstice.
While unique to Ohio, within most of the United States, serpent mounds
have been found elsewhere in the world, including Britain and Mexico. Also the dragon, snake or reptile image has played
an important role in ancient cultural artworks throughout the world.
So why were the serpent
images considered so important to the ancient people that they would build massive earthworks like the ones found in the rural
areas of the Midwestern United States?
Like images found in
England, South America and in other parts
of the world, the serpent mounds can only be seen and appreciated for their artwork from the air. The people of that prehistoric
era did not have the capability of flight.
But aliens did.
And Lucifer, the progenitor
of the human race, was described in the Book of Genesis as a serpent when he tempted Eve in the Garden of Eden. Was it because
he is serpentine in physical appearance?
Consider that the ancient
humans had both the memory and myth of the Luciferian contact, when the alien DNA was added to that of a humanoid primate
on Earth to give us the level of human intelligence we now possess. He turned us from mere animals to creatures with a shared
soul.
Thus they built monuments
to Lucifer, constantly inviting his return. They did not fear the serpent god. They worshipped it.
In addition to the serpent
mounts, the ancient civilizations in the United States
built large earthen mounds. The remains of these works are nearly all destroyed now, but they existed throughout the Midwest. They were round in their shape when found by early settlers. I believe they were originally
shaped like pyramids.
The pyramids were built
in rock all over the world. They remain a mystery to this day, but I am convinced that they too are related to the alien connection.