100,000 BCE |
There are many speculations about where we came from. In this period, human existence is reflected in the arts and culture of the people of KMT. Kemetic civilizations during this period create artful incisions in ocher, that would remain engraved into KMT soil for hundreds of thousands of years later.
|
50,000 BCE |
Kemet suffers the loss of about 30% of its wildlife
species due to a climate change. In this period, cave paintings from resting posts depict the images of the wild life that existed during this period.
|
41,000 BCE |
Kemetics mine iron in what is now Swaziland. This is the earliest sites where individuals mine for materials. This practice of mining iron, becomes the legacy of the early KMT civilizations, that pushes the evolutionary development of these societies forward.
|
37,000-200 BCE |
KMT civilizations, such as the Nok , create highly complex sculptures and works, which demonstrates the sophistication of these prehistoric civilizations.
|
35,000 BCE |
KMT civilizations creates mechanisms to calculate mathematics. These mechanisms reveal that these prehistoric civilizations used a mathematic base of 7, which was calculated with sticks, bones or other objects.
These items were then used to calculate the moon cycles (prehistoric calendars)
|
28,000 BCE |
Another drastic climate change leads to the world going through another
major Ice Age. Landscapes changes, including the Sahara which is elevated up to the Ethiopian
Highlands. Meanwhile, the mountain ranges in central KMT are blanketed with ice. In the northwest region, the
River Nile (located around the North Khartoum) vanishes.
|
22,000-11,600 BCE |
In the last stages of the Ice Age, during this period, most of the earth (Aye) is covered with snow or water. As the ice in the northern and very southern regions begin to melt, the water levels begin to increase. Many
early civilizations are destroyed during this period.
|
11,500-10,500 BCE |
End of the Ice Age. The climate of the Earth abruptly
warmed by 20 degrees or more. Temperature increase of almost 59 degrees in
the north polar region within a 50-year period, with rapid rise in sea level.
|
10,500-6000 BCE |
The surviving KMT civilizations have migrated up towards the center regions of the Uplands of the Nile Valley. Or have expanded further out, in search of fertile land. These civilizations migrated particularly in the Great Lakes Region of Central
KMT. The Sicilian historian Diodorus Siculus writing later claims that the Kemetics
civilization became the source of lost Ice Age culture for the rest of the
communities outside Kemet, which had become disorganized and culturally
impoverished.
Diodorus claims that the Ethiopians (inclusive of all Kemet, and not to be confused with modern Ethiopia) set out, lead by Osiris, with a great army, "with the intention of visiting all the inhabited earth and teaching the race of men how to cultivate ... for he (Osiris) supposed that if he made men give up their savagery and adopt a gentle manner of life he would receive immortal honors..." In this period the Great Sphinxes (supposedly originally two existed) are constructed and other astronomically-correct monuments and astral-geometrical structures all over the Earth. Highly organized astronomic-megalithic Kemetic-cent red world civilization founds daughter civilizations in Mesoamerica, Eurasia and Oceania. Together the Kemetics and the other humans build massive stone calendars and clocks to map the sky. Civilizations proceed to expand further away from each other, to reduce the likelihood of conflict between neighboring civilizations. |
10,000 BCE |
Climate change brought 500 years of persistent, heavy
rains and transformed the Nile from a sluggish flow into a wild river with
gorges one mile deep.
|
8200 BCE |
In southern and eastern Kemet, stones engraved with
geometric line designs and representations of animals.
|
8000 BCE |
The Kongo Empire discover the practice of brain surgery, and
make complex mathematical notations. Lake Chad almost filled its present
drainage basin over flows and spills into the southwestern regions into the Benue River and then into the Atlantic.
|
8000-2000 BCE |
People from central Kemet occupy the plains of
northwestern Kemet.
|
6090-5429 B.C.E |
A non-Semitic civilization settles in Mesopotamia. This civilization becomes the civilization of the Sumerians. This is the first dynasty of the Sumerians. By 5429 BCE, the Sumerian civilization is invaded and goes into a Dark Age.
|
6000 BCE |
KMT tribes begin to settle into the islands of the Mediterranean and
in Europe. The Mediterranean becomes an area with a fusion of different tribes from different regions. This fusion of empires and cultural backgrounds will later be the base for the foundation of Ancient Greece. Meanwhile, the tribes that move into Europe, continue to expand their settlements throughout Europe, modern Britain, modern Ireland and throughout Russia.
|
5500 BC |
In KMT, amazing images of
animals and humans are engraved and later painted on rock surfaces in the
still temperate Sahara. The Large Wild Fauna style features hunting scenes
with big game, including the giant buffalo. The Bovidian Pastoral style
refers to images of domestic herds thought to have been drawn by early
farmers. Tissili and Tibesti Massifs are major centers of Kemetic culture, to
which communities across Kemet trace origins. The harp is depicted in rock
art of the Sahara dating back over 7,000 years ago.
|
100,000 TO 5001 BCE
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oh wow interesting...
ReplyDeletei like how i can zoom into the picture and see the land...