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The dogon people, the Nommos & Sirius B

The Dogon, the Nomos and Sirius BThe Dogon are an ethnic group living in the central plateau region of Mali, and their astronomical folklore goes back over 5000 years of a tradition of contact with intelligent extraterrestrials from the Sirius star system. According to their traditions, the star Sirius has a companion star which is invisible to the human eye. This companion star has a 50-year elliptical orbit around the visible Sirius. This legend was of little interest to anybody but the two French anthropologists, Marcel Griaule and Germain Dieterlen, who recorded it from four Dogon priests in the 1930's. Of little interest except that it is exactly true. How did a people who lacked any kind of astronomical devices know so much about an invisible star? The star, which scientists call Sirius B, was first observed in 1862 and was first photographed in 1970. The mystery is how the Dogon allegedly acquired knowledge of Sirius B, the white dwarf companion star of Sirius A, invisible to the naked eye. According to their oral traditions, a race people from the Sirius system called the Nommos visited Earth thousands of years ago. The Nommos were ugly, amphibious beings that resembled mermen and mermaids. They also appear in Babylonian, Accadian, Egyptian and Sumerian myths. One unproven aspect of the Dogon knowledge of the Sirius system is the belief that the Dogon know of another star in the Sirius system, Emme Ya, or "larger than Sirius B but lighter and dim in magnitude." A study published in 1995, based on anomalous perturbations of Sirius B concluded that the presence of a third star orbiting Sirius could not be ruled out. They landed on Earth in an "ark" that made a spinning decent to the ground with great noise and wind. It was the Nommos that gave the Dogon the knowledge about Sirius B. How Could this Knowledge have been gained without WITHOUT ALIEN Contact?:

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