The Dobble People
                 
   
 

Children of the Dobble People

 
     
                   
 

10-March-2006

DOBBLE ('da bel) PEOPLE

Anyone looking for a definitive history of the Dobble People will come up empty. Noted historians and paleontologists dismiss the Dobble People as fictitious creations. Others believe they are related to all diminutive humans and are direct descendants of the lost Patagonian Pigmy Tribe. They were believed to be very shy and fearful of other humans. This may explain why proof of their existence is spotty at best. 

Other folklore links these creatures to graphic phallus symbols. Artifacts and petroglyphs found near the ruins of Machu Picchu point to a theory that statues depicting Dobble People act as aphrodisiacs to their possessor. 

The truth about Dobbles may have been lost through the sands of time.

12-October-2011

CUZCO PERU:

While attending a symposium with world renowned ancient astronaut investigators, Dr. Emilio Padroza has ignited a firestorm of controversy regarding the Dobble People. The world's academic and scientific communities have disagreed for decades over the existence of ancient astronauts. Dr. Padroza recently discovered similarities between the Dobble artifacts discovered in 2005 near Comodoro Rivadavia, Argentina and Tiahuanaco drawings found as far north as Bolivia.

Many theorists have attributed Machu Picchu as a dwelling place of ancient astronauts and the Nazca Lines of Peru as navigational aids created by the Tiahuanaco empire. Noted historians agree that the Tiahuanaco empire never even came close to Nazca. Visitations by ancient astronauts to the Andes are estimated at about 600 A.D. On his most recent expedition, Dr. Padroza was acting on his theory that the visitations occurred much earlier, between 4000 and 3000 B.C.. The theory is based on the runes appearing on the Dobble People's "Rosetta Stone" referring to the Father of all Light. Padroza now believes that Xenoxotyl may be the earliest ancient astronaut. He came from the far dark skies. Zantrilia may have been the earliest female astronaut.

Armed with this information, Padroza initiated correspondence with other investigators until he was contacted by an anonymous source citing a discovery in the foothills below Navado Huascaran, Peru's highest peak. Skeletal remains of pigmy-like people estimated to be about 5000 years old were found in a shallow tomb. This would place the remains at about 3000 B.C. corresponding roughly to the Dobble's 'golden age'. Padroza theorized that since the Dobble People were nomadic, they could have traveled about 2,000 miles north over the centuries from Patagonia through Bolivia and then to Peru. The telling evidence becomes more complex. Dr. Padroza has affirmed the the remains are Dobble People. The shards of an amulet bearing a resemblance to the rune representing Zantrilia on the "Rosetta Stone" was found near one of the skeletons. Padroza now believes that the Dobble People regarded the star crossed couple of Xenoxotyl and Zantrilia as a god and goddess descended from the heavens. Thus, the Dobble People wore jewelry as a sign of worship. Testing of the amulet revealed that Zantrilia's eye is an azure blue color. The remains are that of two males and a female, all three in their late teens or twenties. DNA testing points to the possibility that the female had blue eyes.

The ancient astronaut investigators and Dr. Padroza now agree on a theory that the Dobble People traversed the Andes, carrying with them the technology to build Machu Picchu and the aeronautical knowledge to create the Nazca Lines. This would also explain how the technology was shared with the Tiahuanaco. Blue eyed citizens of South America may attribute their current blue eyes as remnants of Spanish Conquistadors (yes, some Spanish people have blue eyes) cohabiting with the Incas. Dr. Padrosa and believers in ancient astronauts, on the other hand, attribute the blue eyes of the Dobble People to the Father of All Light and his Earthly descendants.

Fact or fiction? You decide. Your Dobble displayed prominently in your home will perhaps shed some light on the story.

"James Francemore é um amigo, escritor com talento e orador público. Embora alguns topônimos são a história real, 'As Pessoas de Dobble' é um trabalho de ficção".

 

 

 
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