Eden in Sumer on the Niger: Archaeological, Linguistic, and Genetic Evidence of 450,000 Years of Atlantis, Eden and Sumer in West Africa

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Chinazor Onianwah, Jan 6, 2014 - Social Science - 250 pages

"EDEN IN SUMER ON THE NIGER" provides archeological, linguistic, genetic, and inscribed evidence of the West African origin of mankind, language, religion and civilization. It provides multidisciplinary evidence of the actual geographical location in West Africa of the Garden of Eden, Atlantis and the original homeland of the Sumerian people before their migration to the "Middle East". By translating hitherto unknown pre-cuneiform inscriptions of the Sumerians, Catherine Acholonu and Sidney Davis have uncovered thousands of years of Africa's lost pre-history and evidences of the West African origins of the earliest Pharaohs and Kings of Egypt and Sumer such as Menes and Sargon the Great. This book provides answers to all lingering questions about the African Cavemen (Igbos/Esh/Adamas/Adites) original guardians of the human races, Who gave their genes for the creation of Homo Sapiens (Adam) and were the teachers in the First Age of the world.

 

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Contents

Section 1
Section 2
Section 3
Section 4
Section 5
Section 6
Section 7
Section 8
Section 11
Section 12
Section 13
Section 14
Section 15
Section 16
Section 17
Section 18

Section 9
Section 10

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About the author (2014)

Professor of African History and Philosophy, Catherine Obianuju Acholonu (26 October 1951 – 18 March 2014) was  born in Orlu, Eastern Nigeria to the family of Chief Lazarus and Lolo Josephine Olumba. She has a Master's Degree and Ph.D. from the University of Dusseldorf, Germany. Professor Acholonu is the author of over 16 books, a Fulbright Scholar at the Westchester Consortium for International Studies, New York, and a former Special Adviser on Arts and Culture to the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. She is the founder and Director of the Catherine Acholonu Research Center, based in Abuja, which is pioneering research into Africa's pre-history. Her translation of ancient African stone, pottery and bronze inscriptions, and linguistic analysis of symbols and cognates are instrumental to her groundbreaking discovery of lost civilizations in Africa. The thesis of her award-winning book They Lived Before Adam: Prehistoric Origins of the Igbo The Never-Benn-Ruled' is consistent with the recent genetic research discovery of an "Older Than Adam DNA" in a South Carolina African-American male. Acholonu is the winner of the 2009 International Book Awards in the USA. She is a Harlem Book Fair Award recipient.

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