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Miles of prehistoric polygonal stone walls still survive scattered across Italy―ancient ruins so stunningly unique, bizarre, and futuristic that scholars, historians, and philosophers once believed they were built by a now-extinct race of giant human beings called the “Cyclopes.” Their building technique resembles that of the Incas/pre-Incas of Peru: enormous stones cut into interlocking angles, placed without mortar. Sadly, modern scholars ignore these ruins while the wider world is oblivious to their existence. We’ll see why some Victorians believed they were built by survivors from Atlantis. They said to have been taller, stronger, more clever, and generally superior to modern man―has been known in all eras as the with the constructions they created termed “Cyclopean.”Many classical writers and historians posited in their writings the idea that the Cyclopean ruins of Italy (and of Europe in general) were erected by this now-extinct Cyclopean race. ....
Salve, in Southern Italy, is famous for sunsets, that set on fire the sea, facades and monuments. The sun dips into water giving us a thousand shades of red, among expanses of white wild lilies, terra. ....
The howl of an Arctic wolf filled Kinnison Hall at the Whitney Center at Sheridan College, when photographer Ronan Donovan spoke about his three month stay among the wolves on Ellesmere Island, illustrated by a slide show and video.