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Old 03-07-2008   #11 (permalink)
Garry Denke's Avatar
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STONEHENGE: An Olympic Sports Amphitheater

Archery Judge Willers Wallers (Backside Bullseye)

Skeleton Could Hold Secret To Stonehenge (from Salisbury Journal)
Stonehenge Was A Site Of Battles (from The Wiltshire Gazette and Herald)

After Woodhenge Warriors' Men's Football loss in the 3100 (BC) Olympic Games to the Durrington Wallers (7-6) at Stonehenge Amphitheatre (alternatively Amphitheater), the Warriors changed their Olympic Men's and Women's Teams' name to "Willers". In the 3096 (BC) Olympics, it was the Woodhenge Willers over the Durrington Wallers in that infamous Sudden Death Match overtime thriller. 1-0 final score. In the Women's Archery competition, it was the Willers over the Wallers also, following their Men's Archery competition victory. Willers' Olympic Men's and Women's Teams dominated the 3096 (BC) Games and were so popular after those Olympics that even the River Wylye (one of eight rivers draining the area) was renamed (previously called Warriors River).

The Sudden Death of 'the body from the ditch' (Stonehenge discovery of 1978) caused by multiple Arrow Wounds in the back, said body on display at Salisbury Museum, sadly occurred during the 2300 (BC) Olympic Games' Women's Archery competition at Stonehenge Amphitheatre. Archery Judge Wallers Willers' (known as Backside Bullseye here at State Press) untimely death, referred to as a Stonehenge Sentinel Skeleton (SSS) by Dennis Price, archaeologist (Stonehenge expert) and described in This Is Wiltshire Network (Gazette & Herald, 7 March 2008), unfortunately occurred at said Amphitheatre when Archery Judge Wallers Willers (SSS) made an untimely movement from behind the Judge Honor's guard (target Game shield) causing His Sudden Death.

Later the town of Wilton and county of Wiltshire adopted their names in their Honor.

360 feet - Stonehenge Amphitheatre latrine (Ditch) diameter
320 feet - Stonehenge Amphitheatre bleachers (Bank) diameter
285 feet - Stonehenge Amphitheatre fence (Aubrey Holes) diameter

The interior is Anciently perfect in size.

3100-2600 BC - Stonehenge Olympic Games field - No stones

(SOS) Stonehenge Olympic Sports:

Archery, Athletics (track and field), Ancient badminton*, Ancient baseball, Boxing, Fencing, Ancient field hockey, Football (soccer), Ancient pentathlon*, Ancient softball, Wilto, Wiltwondo, Ancient tennis, Volleyball, Weightlifting (rocklifting), and Wrestling.

*Note: 3000 BC - Wooden structures added for Ancient gymnastics; Uneven bars, Balance beam, Salisbury floor exercise, and Vault (for Women), and High bar and Parallel bars, Salisbury floor exercise, Vault, and Pommel horse** (for Men).

**It evolved from exercises used by Homo erectus and Neanderthal, including skills for mounting and dismounting a horse, and various performance skills.

2600 BC - Olympic Games' first Rock (Bluestone) Trophies awarded.

Salisbury Museum "the body from the ditch" Exhibit
The "Stonehenge Sentinel Skeleton" SSS Theory

Was the SSS's name The Right Honourable Archery Judge Wallers Willers who got killed in that tragic Target Archery accident, or was the SSS's name The Right Honourable Archery Judge Willers Wallers who got killed in that tragic Target Archery accident?

Stonehenge Archery's deceased Field Target Archery Judge's last name must have been Willers, not Wallers, because Wiltshire would be called Waltshire if it was, which of course it is not. Likewise, Stonehenge Archery's deceased Field Target Archery Judge's first name must have been Wallers, not Willers, because Wiltshire would be called Waltshire if it was, which it is not. Us here at State Press who have investigated this matter, therefore, are going with "Stonehenge Archery Judge Wallers Willers", not "Stonehenge Archery Judge Willers Wallers", unless you have a better foundation of historical information at your disposal than any of us.

Here is how it will be printed with His name unreleased: "UK, Wiltshire, Salisbury Museum exhibit 'the body from the ditch' SKELETON was a Stonehenge Archery Judge who inspected an Archery Field Target at Stonehenge prematurely, a volley of Archers' Arrows accidently causing His death from behind." And here is how it will be printed with His name released: "UK, Wiltshire, Salisbury Museum exhibit 'the body from the ditch' SKELETON was Stonehenge Archery Judge Wallers Willers, deceased, who inspected an Archery Field Target at Stonehenge prematurely, a volley of Archers' Arrows accidently causing His death from behind."

Sentinel: Middle French sentinelle, from Old Italian sentinella, from sentina vigilance, from sentire to perceive, from Latin, year 1579, an Archery Judge is a Sentinel of Archery, vigilant and perceptive. Olympic Games Judges - Sentinels of respective Sports, therefore "SSS Theory" unified.

Stonehenge Free Festivals Were Completely Wonderful...

G. Willy Wally

Last edited by Garry Denke; 03-09-2008 at 09:38 AM. Reason: Archery Judge Accident
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Old 03-15-2008   #12 (permalink)
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Happy St. Patrick's Day!



Backside Bullseye

Last edited by Garry Denke; 03-15-2008 at 09:58 PM.
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Old 03-16-2008   #13 (permalink)
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Arrow Re: STONEHENGE: An Olympic Sports Amphitheater

Quote:
Originally Posted by Garry Denke View Post
Archery Judge Willers Wallers (Backside Bullseye)

Skeleton Could Hold Secret To Stonehenge (from Salisbury Journal)


G. Willy Wally
Quote:
Originally Posted by Salis Bury Stake
A SKELETON, which has been on prominent display in Salisbury Museum for nearly a decade, could hold the secret to Stonehenge's mysterious past and show the site to be an arena of gladiatorial combat, an archaeological expert has claimed.

The skeleton, that of a man who had been killed by arrows in 2,300 BC, was discovered in the ditch surrounding the stones during excavation work, carried out by Professor Richard Atkinson and J.G Evans in 1978. ...
Gee willikers Mr. Wilson! I'm all walleyed over the arrows in the skelly. Was any more work done on it, or do you know the particulars of the arrows? How many? Where located? Type of arrow head? Any parts of the shafts recovered?

I hear the authorities determined the 5,000 year old 'Ice Man' was arrow-shot too. Anyway, on the Stonehenge, I think the world needs nothing less than to employ a lot of young curious people to dig the whole thing up to a such a depth that no stone is left un-turned, and give them college credits for learning to do it right. Then on to the Sphinx.


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Old 03-17-2008   #14 (permalink)
Garry Denke's Avatar
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STONEHENGE: Ancient Amphitheatre Archery

Quote:
Originally Posted by Salis Bury Stake View Post
Gee willikers Mr. Wilson! I'm all walleyed over the arrows in the skelly.
"Was any more work done on it?" - Yes
"Do you know the particulars of the arrows?" Yes
"How many?" 6 for certain, 7 (more) probable
"Where located?" Simultaneous in back
"Type of arrow head?" Flints stone
"Any parts of the shafts recovered?" No

Salisbury and South Wiltshire Museum : Galleries

Over 300 skeletons (7th Cavalry Regiment and Lakota-Northern Cheyenne) are in graves at Little Bighorn Battlefield monument, and yet at the Stonehenge 'monument' there are [were] only 2 Stone Age skeletons in graves; Archery Judge Wallers Willers who died in an archery accident, and Construction Worker Willers Wallers who died in an earlier construction accident. Interesting enough none of the 7th Cavalry Regiment skeletons at Custer's Last Stand had a simultaneous volley of seven (7) arrows shot into the back of any 7th Cavalry Regiment soldier.

The Royal Society - Council for British Archaeology - Wessex Archaeology (and Stonehenge expert, Dennis Price, archaeologist) - Triple Crown Claim - that Stonehenge was a sacred temple of "ritual combat" between one (1) noble "gladiatorial" Stonehenge Challenger shooting one (1) noble "gladiatorial" Stonehenge Sentinel in the back, such customary "ritual" being a simultaneous volley of seven (7) arrows shot into each Stonehenge Sentinel successor from behind , is not only righteously illogical but mechanically impossible for one (1) to perform.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Turtle View Post
I hear the authorities determined the 5,000 year old 'Ice Man' was arrow-shot too. Anyway, on the Stonehenge, I think the world needs nothing less than to employ a lot of young curious people to dig the whole thing up to a such a depth that no stone is left un-turned, and give them college credits for learning to do it right. Then on to the Sphinx.
Happy Paddy' Day Turtle!



(you Salis Bury Stake too!)


Last edited by Garry Denke; 03-17-2008 at 07:15 PM. Reason: F'x GarryOwenDenke F'troop F'up
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Old 03-18-2008   #15 (permalink)
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Arrow Re: STONEHENGE: Ancient Amphitheatre Archery

Quote:
Originally Posted by Garry Denke View Post
"Was any more work done on it?" - Yes
"Do you know the particulars of the arrows?" Yes
"How many?" 6 for certain, 7 (more) probable
"Where located?" Simultaneous in back
"Type of arrow head?" Flints stone
"Any parts of the shafts recovered?" No

Salisbury and South Wiltshire Museum : Galleries


Happy Paddy' Day Turtle!

(you Salis Bury Stake too!)

Has Seren Dipity been talking about me to you again? Don't believe half of it, and none of it about my shaft. Now about the heads, the arrow heads Garry, stay with me...so, do you know anything about the classification type of the points found in Willers/Wallers in da ditch? On reading that the Waillys got stone backed and no mountains, I recalled a show I recently saw on the Clovis points found in N. America, and I seem to recall further they said the only similar type of bi-facial point with flutes is found in France. Mon dieu! What's an Irishman to do?

Well, this one Googled 'stone aroowhead classification' and found this from your neck of the woots. >>PROJECTILE POINTS
Quote:
Originally Posted by utexas.edu
The typology of projectile points that have been distributed throughout Texas aides many archaeologists in the analyzation of the cultural prehistory of certain regions of Texas. Once archaeologists determine the geographical context and temporary distribution of certain types of projectile points, they can use the information to ascertain the time period from which the points belong. Archaeological experts are still rather unclear on why ancient Indian tribes changed the shape of projectile points over time. Many base their theories on the production of new and various types of weapons, such as hafted knives (see image on right), and fluctuations in the types of animals hunted. These evolutions in style prove conducive, however, as they "provide invaluable indicators of the chronology of culture change in different regions of Texas"(Turner and Hester, 1985:10). ...
So, that's a rap & it's off to knap,
day is gone & knights no sap.


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Old 03-18-2008   #16 (permalink)
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STONEHENGE: The Super Bowl

Thus Stonehenge originally, as most of the Stone Age henges dugout in Britain, is the remains of an Ancient hunt for Coal fuel



LORD Fellow of Woodhenge (above) converted the failed Coal exploration sites (dusters) to recreational Sport amphitheatres

Coal Bowl, Old Heaven



Ancient spectators sat on Fenced out banked Bleachers facing The Super Bowl, as thousands still do at the 'Oldest' stadium

Yale Bowl, New Haven



Proof being Crosskeys Coal samples, a Pigskin Leather football and Lambskin Leather volleyball inside Heelstone Locker 'room'

Interesting enough Sportsters
Yale Bowl is a Coal duster site


Garry Denke

Last edited by Garry Denke; 03-19-2008 at 08:29 AM. Reason: Coal samples, 'rugby' ball, 'soccer' ball
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Old 03-18-2008   #17 (permalink)
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Arrow Re: STONEHENGE: The Super Bowl

Quote:
Originally Posted by Garry Denke View Post
Thus Stonehenge originally, as most of the Stone Age henges dugout in Britain, is the remains of an Ancient hunt for Coal fuel

LORD Fellow of Woodhenge (above) converted the failed Coal exploration sites (dusters) to recreational Sport amphitheatres

Coal Bowl, Old Heaven

Ancient spectators sat on Fenced out banked Bleachers facing The Super Bowl, as thousands still do at the 'Oldest' stadium

Yale Bowl, New Haven

Proof being Crosskeys Coal samples, a Pigskin Leather football and Lambskin Leather volleyball inside Heelstone Locker 'room'

Interesting enough Sportsters
Yale Bowl is a Coal duster site


Garry Denke
I expected a curve, just not an oval. So it was new coal and not new copper they came across the pond for you think? Or both? The coal was to use in metal manufacture may I presume? That wiki is a caution; answering a complaint before it is raised. We've been burmed! Is Captain Russel listening? ..........


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Old 03-19-2008   #18 (permalink)
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Cool Re: STONEHENGE: The Super Bowl

Quote:
Originally Posted by Turtle View Post
I expected a curve, just not an oval.
Well, I for one expected exactly an oval....

All I can say about all this is, it's just not cricket.

John Henry Newman was as English as roast beef, even if he lacked a passion for cricket,
Buffy


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Old 03-19-2008   #19 (permalink)
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Arrow Re: STONEHENGE: The Super Bowl

Quote:
Originally Posted by Buffy View Post
Well, I for one expected exactly an oval....

All I can say about all this is, it's just not cricket.

John Henry Newman was as English as roast beef, even if he lacked a passion for cricket,
Buffy
Quote:
He [Clifford Longley] has also served on the Prince of Wales's Islamic Advisory Gourp... Clifford Longley biography
Gourp!? Gourp!!??
Tastes like chicken.


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Old 03-20-2008   #20 (permalink)
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Arrow Re: STONEHENGE: A Football Stadium

So I don't know specifically about cricket, I just show up as a spectator when there's bats and/or balls.

Some of us here in the stands got to talking at half-time, and wondered if Native Americans burned coal as fuel? Off to consult the oracle before the the start of the next period. Hope I haven't gone too far afield. ...........................


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