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【A series of shocking discoveries have been made in the Japanese archipelago.】
First, a series of stones engraved with strange patterns, or "petrographs," were discovered on Hikoshima Island, located on the western edge of Shimonoseki City, Yamaguchi Prefecture, in front of the Kanmon Straits.
As we proceeded to decipher them, we discovered a startling fact.
To our surprise, the petroglyphs were ancient Sumerian script.
Later, petroglyphs were discovered one after another in various locations in northern Kyushu and western Yamaguchi Prefecture
The news of the discovery of the petroglyphs has attracted more attention and appreciation abroad than in Japan.
Nobuhiro Yoshida, a pioneer of petrographic research in Japan, described his impressions when he was invited for the first time to an international conference organized by the American Institute of Petrography.
I brought Japanese data to a place where Western scholars had hypothesized that since there are petrographs in the Pacific Rim, there should naturally be petrographs in the Japanese archipelago as well.
I was asked so many questions during the break that I didn't even have time to have a cup of coffee.
At first I had no idea that there would be such a huge response overseas.
Posted by tanog : May 14, 2020
The carving on the Misakubo stone https://tenryu-rakuichi.amebaownd.com/posts/3333276/
in "Mizukubo水窪 (MISAKUBO), the setting of Tao Tsuchiya's debut work" which I uploaded last month, here
is also believed to be an ancient Sumerian script.
Are there any young people who will give up on Corona's Tokyo and move to Mizukubo?
Let's build a new life far beyond the conventional concept of town revitalization.
Initially, it may be similar to the image of the TV drama "From the North," but eventually the gap will be overcome.
If they want to, they can always go to Tokyo.
After all, that is Hamamatsu City.
This is a message from the Mizukubo cheering man.
Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)