Garry Denke Posted September 30, 2008 Report Share Posted September 30, 2008 Jacquetta Hawkes had the right idea when she said,'Each generation gets the Stonehenge it deserves' Here the 352-year-old Stonehenge deserved: Germanic tribesman doctor-dentist, "The King of Stonehenge" ("Amesbury Archer": born; 2340 BC - died; 2300 BC), came to Salisbury Plain from the Rhineland brown coal fields in 2323 BC seeking fortune. This ancient Royal architect (Snow sled inventor, Born in the Alps) designed Stonehenge Hospital healing centre, Double Bluestone Horsehoof, in honor of His two (2) beloved horses. For over a week "Bluestone and Bluestone" had pulled the Snow sleigh from South Wales to Stonehenge during the Snow blizzard of 2323 BC. The King's world sledding accomplishment and Hospital healing centre Stones (famous due to His mastery of skills in dentistry) made this ancient doctor-dentist remembered. Northern European patients declared Him 'one of the greatest Healers of all time' for over a century. Descendants of the King's patients and those of His Son (dental assistant) memorialised Them during the Snow blizzard of 2222 BC by rebuilding the Alps-born invention for sledging Sarsen. Wood and stone were sledded to Stonehenge in the same Kingly fashion by Horse drawn Snow sledge, and the modeled horsehoof Doctor's Office rearranged to teach and heal European teeth through adult Bluestone and baby Sarsen. Tooth Extraction by Surgeon Stonehenge Hospital Dentist Office, your Adult Teeth, your Baby Teeth "Picture yourself walking into your mouth, sitting down on your tongue, your front teeth to your back." Doctor Garry Whilhelm Denke (Diary of 1656)(1622-1699) dentist, antiquarian, historian "Now lean way back..." Open U'r Mouth Wide: Circle Imagine your dentist office and dental clinic building fashionably designed like your teeth,remember being young knowing little about teeth and your first trip to see the dentist. Tooth surgery on adults and children still outnumber other procedures,in the ancient past the number one procedure was tooth extraction. Has your dentist ever shown teeth models to you,Stonehenge Hospital patients saw them also. Compare Proportional Girthshttp://www.georgetownedental.com/images/PrimaryTeeth.jpg Sarsen 51-52 girths - Stonehenge Hospital baby First Molar and Second Molar teethSarsen 53-54 girths - Stonehenge Hospital baby Canine Cuspid and Lateral Incisor teethSarsen 55-56 girths - Stonehenge Hospital baby Left and Right Central Incisor teethSarsen 57-58 girths - Stonehenge Hospital baby Canine Cuspid and Lateral Incisor teethSarsen 59-60 girths - Stonehenge Hospital baby First Molar and Second Molar teeth Compare Adult / Baby Teethhttp://www.georgetownedental.com/images/PermanentTeeth.jpg Elder Bluestone: Adult Teeth My great-grandparents both died from bad tooth infections,Stonehenge was a hospital, Altar Stone a dentist chair. Geoff Wainwright and Timothy Darvill are right,yes, Stonehenge was built for the Hospital. Have you seen Cast Away the movie,do remember to brush and floss. Garry Denke Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Garry Denke Posted October 3, 2008 Author Report Share Posted October 3, 2008 Ancient Reconstruction, Stonehenge Hospital "We were born, We were in pain, We were faithful, We were buried."-Dr. Garry Denke (1622-1699) historian, antiquarian, dentist Delivery Room of Life Birth Canal Theory, Doctor-Dentist Theory, Faith Healing Theory, Cemetery TheoryPerks-Bailey --> Denke --> Wainwright-Darvill --> Pearson "We are born with two sets of teeth." Human teeth begin to form in the embryo, months before a baby is born; they develop from a core of cells in the center of each jaw. This core gradually grows backwards on each side, through the embryo areas, which eventually become hardened as jawbones. Small side branches of cells break off and form tooth buds, one bud for each tooth, making fifty-two (52) buds in all. These develop into tooth shapes, and then start to form the hard dental tissues - enamel, dentine and cement - to become fully formed teeth, embedded in the gums. At birth, all the deciduous teeth are formed, except for their roots. Two (2) Sets of Teeth Old Red tongue; Baby tongue: Altar StoneBluestone inner teeth; Baby permanent teeth: bluestonesSarsen outer teeth; Baby primary teeth: sarsensCircles 'mouths'; Mother-Baby 'lips': bluestones-sarsens "Expression of the Natural Order or an Unnatural Order?" SH: An Unnatural Order 1) Death-burial; proof: *corpse-cremation*2) Healing-faith; proof: *bluestones-cure*3) Pain-medical; proof: *sarsens-girths*4) Mother-Baby; proof: *arrangement* Centre of Stonehenge is the Tongue of a Baby, two Sets of Teeth the Primary and Permanent,open 'Mouths' the 'Lips' of Mother-Baby, whose Future is one of Pain and Faith and Death. "Stonehenge Reconstructed to the Natural Order." SH: The Natural Order 1) Mother-Baby; proof: *arrangement*2) Pain-medical; proof: *sarsens-girths*3) Healing-faith; proof: *bluestones-cure*4) Death-burial; proof: *corpse-cremation* Thus the central message spoken by Old Red Sandstone tongueof central Stonehenge is we are born with two sets of teeth. "Stonehenge is a Baby being Born." Perks-Bailey Wins! :hyper: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Garry Denke Posted October 11, 2008 Author Report Share Posted October 11, 2008 Researchers Disagree About Age, Purpose of Stonehenge I see that Pearson, Pitts and Richards have proven, a) SH did not begin as a cemetery and, :) SH did not begin as a wooden building. No bones were in any of the 56 Aubrey Holes at first, they were full of 56 Pembrokeshire Blue Stone. Those 3000 BC bones had to be buried after Blue Stone was removed. That makes their SH arrival date earlier (3100 BC) coinciding with the Ditch surrounding them. Pearson, Pitts and Richards might consider 3100 BC Pembrokeshire Blue Coal (anthracite) explorers from Preseli Hills marking SH fast silting-in Ditch coal duster with 56 Pembrokeshire Blue Stone (volcanics) who abandoned the duster later which became their cemetery. Wainwright and Darvill might consider this also since that is what happened (great Cursus Coal Cache found). In 7 days Public Consultation of the Future of SH will end. Lt-Col William Hawley and Robert Newall original 1920s evidence (56 'X' Holes) first holding Blue Stone has been confirmed. Scroll Trench was also a Hawley and Newall discovery West-SW of Heelstone (unfinished). Will it be Pearson, Pitts and Richards digging up the Arc Trench ending? or will it be Wainwright and Darvill digging up the Arc Trench ending? SH is just Stonehenge? or SH is Stonehenge Hospital? In 7 days. Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Scroll Trench Garry Denke Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Garry Denke Posted October 11, 2008 Author Report Share Posted October 11, 2008 The Royal Society of Medicine has already proven Geoff Wainwright, Timothy Darvill and Timewatch: Stonehenge team's healing theory true inside 9,000-year-old Stonehenge Hospital healing centre with ancient Stillborn Baby Skull Teeth (primary Baby Teeth and permanent Baby Teeth intact) centralised at the Stonehenge Baby Delivery Room birth canal described in the JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF MEDICINE, Volume 96, February 2003, "Stonehenge: a view from medicine" by eminent Dr Anthony M Perks, PhD, DSc, and Darlene Marie Bailey, BA, JR Soc Med 2003; 96: 94–98, the publication over 5 years old. Stonehenge Hospital healing centre Stillborn Baby Teeth Skull (having the primary and permanent Baby Teeth) excavated by Dr Garry W Denke (1622-1699) historian, antiquarian, dentist (1656 Diary) at Stonehenge precise centre (June, 1655) has a radiometric date of 9,000 years ago (7000 BC) matching the Geoff Wainwright, Timothy Darvill and Timewatch: Stonehenge team's confirmation date of Dr Garry W Denke's original Stonehenge Baby Delivery Room coal-fired Ice Age heating furnace: housed in Caddo by Hell's Gate, Brazos River South Wall, 'Great Kingdom of the Tejas', Palo Pinto County; near Breckenridge. And Interesting enough Timewatch, Geoff Wainwright and Timothy Darvill's theory of the Stonehenge Hospital mortuary has been verified, categorically proving it being a morgue (Stonehenge not a cemetery), because currently there are no known human remains at Stonehenge Hospital mortuary. Julian Richards and Michael Pitts removed the last of Stonehenge Hospital remains on 1st September 2008 at the morgue. All known human remains that ever were stored there have been removed, therefore any theory claiming that Stonehenge Hospital mortuary was a cemetery is categorically false. Stonehenge Not A Cemetery: Morgue - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaCemetery - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia G-d Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Garry Denke Posted October 13, 2008 Author Report Share Posted October 13, 2008 British Archaeology English Heritage and BritArch folks corrected "Stonehenge Hedgehog" to pig: "Stone Henge-Hog"."Stone Henge-Hog" named by Mike Pitts of BritArch after Stonehenge Luau 56 pig-roast holes. Child buried with unique carved pig (see photo, right)"A tiny carved chalk pig was buried with the remains of a young child over 2,000 years ago within sight of Stonehenge. The bones of the infant were in a pot dated to 450-100BC (iron age). The carving may have had a ritual significance or have been a toy." Go figure? Stonehenge Hospital cafeteria? Thanks, Garry Denke Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Garry Denke Posted October 16, 2008 Author Report Share Posted October 16, 2008 Healing Stonehenge Hospital English Heritage Stonehenge Consultation endDrums, Pa says dig Arc Trench endLt-Col William HawleyHawley, Lt-Col W, The Excavations at Stonehenge. (The Antiquaries Journal 1, Oxford University Press, 19-41). 1921.Hawley, Lt-Col W, Second Report on the Excavations at Stonehenge. (The Antiquaries Journal 2, Oxford University Press, 36-52). 1922.Hawley, Lt-Col W, Third Report on the Excavations at Stonehenge. (The Antiquaries Journal 3, Oxford University Press, 13-20). 1923.Hawley, Lt-Col W, Fourth Report on the Excavations at Stonehenge. (The Antiquaries Journal 4, Oxford University Press, 30-39). 1923.Hawley, Lt-Col W, Report on the Excavations at Stonehenge during the season of 1923. (The Antiquaries Journal 5, Oxford University Press, 21-50). 1925.Hawley, Lt-Col W, Report on the Excavations at Stonehenge during the season of 1924. (The Antiquaries Journal 6, Oxford University Press, 1-25). 1926.Hawley, Lt-Col W, Report on the Excavations at Stonehenge during 1925 and 1926. (The Antiquaries Journal 8, Oxford University Press, 149-176). 1928.Lt-Col William HawleyDrums, Pa says dig Arc Trench endEnglish Heritage Stonehenge Consultation end We tried, We failed, Bye Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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