In Search of Ancient Mysteries

by Alan and Sally Landsburg

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Status

Available

Call number

001.9

Publication

Bantam Books

User reviews

LibraryThing member Jonathan_M
Not just a fun read (though it is that), but also a sincere effort on the part of television producer Alan Landsburg to explore the Paleo-SETI theory. There's a heavy focus on South American archaeological mysteries, which earns the book a special place in my heart; Landsburg postulates that
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Tiahuanaco (the ruined pre-Incan city that sits in an extremely remote and inhospitable location in Bolivia, 13,000 feet above sea level) may have been the first settlement of extraterrestrial visitors to Earth in ancient times. Along the way, the reader also becomes acquainted with fascinating theories like directed panspermia: the notion that "life was deliberately sent here by a technological society on some other planet," in the words of Dr. Leslie Orgel, the theory's co-author (with Nobel Prize-winning biophysicist Francis Crick).

Are any definite conclusions drawn? No, but Landsburg raises a lot of interesting questions, and he was a far better writer than Erich von Däniken. In Search of Ancient Mysteries also includes a neat foreword by Rod Serling (who narrated the 1974 TV special of the same name), and many black-and-white photographs.
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Original publication date

1974

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