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A
New Ancient Crystal Skull Discovered!
The Mitchell-Hedges
Crystal Skull is no longer unique! Out of Africa – by way
of California – emerges another ancient skull, “Compassion”,
with a detachable jaw. Already, this skull is re-carving the crystal
skull landscape!
Philip Coppens
With
the 2008 release of “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the
Crystal Skull”, crystal skulls attained a far higher level
of exposure than ever before. Before, crystal skulls had only
become somewhat famous in the 1980s, particularly in New Age circles.
Today, there are hundreds of crystal skulls, almost all of them
of modern fabrication (most made in China) and used in various
New Age-type seminars. Only a handful of skulls are suspected
of having ancient origins, including the most famous of all crystal
skulls: the Mitchell-Hedges crystal skull.
“Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull”
makes scant references to the Mitchell-Hedges crystal skull. It
stands out for it is by far the most complex, and the only skull
with a detachable jaw, meaning that whomever made this, was a
master artist in carving crystal – able to create a feat
that modern carvers have been unable to accomplish. Gerald Leandro
De Souza, a master skull carver from Brazil with 25 years of experience
behind him, notes that “the process of cutting the jaw from
a skull causes the jaw to break and is almost impossible for skull
carvers to accomplish.”
Still, sceptics, principally led by Jane Walsh, an anthropologist
at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, try to
argue that all these skulls are of modern fabrications. So far,
none of the claims made by Walsh and co. have been substantiated,
let alone supported by factual evidence. Specifically, Walsh tries
to point the finger to Germany and the town of Idar-Oberstein,
arguing most of these skulls were carved there by the resident
artists. However, no records of skull carving have ever been found
there; there are no records of any carver doing carving in the
middle of the 19th century, when some of these skulls are said
to have been made. In short, Walsh’s theories remain totally
unsubstantiated – not very scientific!
On the other side of the debate are the likes of Nick Nocerino,
one of the first crystal skull researchers, who travelled extensively
throughout Central America, in search of them. He noted how on
several occasions, Indian tribes offered skulls on sale to him,
as with the money, the local shamans could buy precious Western
medicine and like, to help their tribe at a time when the Mayan
people were subjected to genocide. Nocerino always refused such
offers, as he strongly believed the skulls were such an integral
part of Mayan society, that these tribes needed their precious
talisman. (Though he did everything to help the tribes in other
ways.)
The
Mitchell-Hedges crystal skull too comes with a Central American
origin. The family itself stated that Anna Mitchell-Hedges found
the skull in the ruins of Lubaantuun on her 17th birthday in 1924.
It is a story Anna adhered to until her death, though it was subjected
to intense criticism from the sceptics. Indeed, a more likely
story about how her father found the skull is told in his novel,
“The White Tiger”, published in 1931. In it, he relates
a largely autobiographical account of an Englishman who is initiated
by a Mayan tribe, to become the principal caretaker of a most
important treasure. When the Mayan priest shows him the treasure,
the Englishman is led down into a series of tunnels, before the
treasure is unveiled to him: “Before him, piled in endless
confusion, lay the treasure of the Aztecs. Gold chalices, bowls,
jars and other vessels of every size and shape; immense plaques
and strange ornaments all glittered dully. Of precious stones
there were none, but many rare chalchihuitl (jadeite pendants)
[sic]. Masks of obsidian and shells beautifully inlaid were all
heaped together with heads carved from solid blocks of crystal.
Legend had not exaggerated the treasure of the Aztecs. Almost
boundless wealth lay at the disposal of the White Tiger.”
“Heads carved from solid blocks of crystals”: a reference
to crystal skulls made by Frederick “Mike” Mitchell-Hedges
in 1931, more than a decade before he – according to the
likes of Walsh – acquired a skull at auction at Sotheby’s
in London in 1943.
Because
it is the most complex, the Mitchell-Hedges crystal skull is both
the most famous and the most debated. It is unique. But today,
the Mitchell-Hedges skull is no longer unique: on August 6, 2009,
former Alaskan fisherman Joe Bennett was able to finally buy,
from a Californian import shop, a crystal skull… with a
detachable jaw, which he soon named “Compassion”.
A new era in crystal skull research had therefore dawned, for
a number of reasons.
Bennett is a retired fisherman from Alaska. He had earned the
nickname “the crystal sailor”, as for years, he had
been collecting an impressive array of crystals. In his hunt for
crystals, in 2006, he stumbled upon a crystal skull, in an import
store in Carmel, California. The skull had belonged to a close
friend of the owners, who had brought it over from Africa. Upon
his death his family liquidated the estate and asked the import
store to sell the crystal skull for them.
Bennett relates how he “noticed a crystal skull in the back
of this shop on a high shelf. I admired the extreme craftsmanship,
saw the price and forgot about it. Like most people I didn’t
have any reference for crystal skulls other than Halloween witches
or Black Magic.” However, the skull did not let go of Joe,
who had a series of vivid dreams about the skull, so much so that
he dispatched his sister – who lived nearby – to make
a series of photographs, which she sent to Joe. It was now only
a matter of time before the skull would end up in Bennett’s
care.
Compassion
is human-sized and clear quartz, 5.5” tall, 5.5” wide
and 8 inches long, weighing 11 pounds – very similar in
dimensions to the Mitchell-Hedges skull. The mouth has 28 teeth.
Little is known of the origins of the skull. It is known that
the skull was in storage in the United States for five years prior
to the shop putting it up for sale. Before, it had spent 22 years
in a warehouse in Africa. The name of the people who owned it
in Africa is not a matter of public record, but initial analyses
of the skull have shown that the crystal is not from Brazil. Gerald
Leandro De Souza argues that the “quartz probably is from
Africa”. The likeliest source is Namibia, Africa, which
is a well-known location where quartz crystal can be found.
Whereas the Mitchell-Hedges skull is “crystal clear”,
Compassion is more like another crystal skull, known as MAX: Compassion
is made out of three distinct layers (MAX has five such layers).
The largest, frontal part is made of the clearest quartz crystal.
Behind, roughly the top of the forehead, is a somewhat softer
section of less-clear crystal. Behind is a final, third layer,
separated from the others by a small fissure of iron oxide, which
one can only truly see from the back of the skull.
The possibility that the material inside the fissure is iron oxide
was first suggested by crystal carver James Ziegler, who added
that the material at the bottom of the fissure was feldspar. This
conclusion was confirmed when Bennett had the skull examined by
Dr. Ray Corbett, Associate Curator of Archaeology at the Natural
History Museum in Santa Barbara and Geologist Dr. John Minch on
March 30, 2010. It was Minch who confirmed that the fissure was
filled with iron oxide.
These experts furthermore accepted that the grounding of the crystal
had occurred by hand, and not by machine. One area of the skull
show pie-shaped areas, which a carver would keep, but a grinding
wheel would smooth out. There are other aspects of the skull,
especially to do with a lack of symmetry between the right and
left side, which show that the work was carried out by human hands.
Corbett and Minch also identified that the natural growth of the
crystal is for the skull to be placed with the teeth pointing
up. This means that the iron oxide layer was at the bottom of
the then axis of the crystal, with the layer of the face being
the clearest and the top one. The carver would have to carve against
the grain of the skull and skip over these fractures, a task which
crystal carvers say is extremely hard to do – surpassing
their expertise.
When one runs a fingernail along the top of the skull, one can
feel the fractures between the layers. Dr. Minch said that whoever
made this skull, would have to do so very slowly, for if the quartz
were to get hot, it would shatter – thus underlining that
the usage of tools in the making of this skull was unlikely.
During testing, Dr. Minch also noted there was an “air bubble”
inside the skull. When the skull is rocked, the bubble moves over
half the thickness (about 1mm) up and down in a solution which
he believes is water, which somehow made its way into the skull
and trapped the air bubble inside. Bennett has speculated whether
this air bubble should be interpreted as a representation of the
pineal gland, a part of the brain that is often referred to as
the “third eye”, and which is therefore heavily imbued
with esoteric meaning. René Descartes even labelled it
the seat of the soul, echoing a belief that goes back thousands
of years.
Minch also found golden rutile in both skull and jaw. Rutile is
a major ore of titanium, and is found as microscopic inclusions
in quartz and other precious gemstones. It is responsible for
many of the light effects that one sees within these objects.
Scientists have a hard time admitting that the detachable jaw
of the Mitchell-Hedges crystal skull is made from crystal (it
is), and is from the same crystal as the rest of the skull (it
is). But no such doubt can arise in the case of Compassion: its
right cheek has a foil in the crystal that runs from the right
cheek into jaw, and hence clearly shows that both the main part
of the skull and the jaw are from the same crystal.
It will be interesting to see what sceptics are now going to do.
In the case of the Mitchell-Hedges crystal skull, they tried to
debate the jaw away, as the creation of such a jaw has never been
accomplished by modern crystal workers. But Compassion will not
look compassionately upon these sceptics, who will have to come
up with stronger arguments, if they want to persist in continuing
the same old controversies in trying to explain away what is one
of the most interesting recent discoveries.
However
impressive Compassion is, its face is not symmetrical. With its
detachable jaw placed underneath the skull’s teeth, Compassion
looks and is symmetrical, but remove the jaw, and it becomes clear
that the skull is off-centre: the teeth are slanted to the right.
The only place where polishing marks are evident to the human
eye is under the maxilla. This area was not finely polished, maybe
to illustrate it was hand carved. The rest of the skull does not
show any of these marks. Indeed, Compassion brings us to an interesting
conclusion: the skull is clearly made by human hands, but whomever
made it, had an expertise in working with quartz crystal, which
exceeds that of anyone alive today. In short, there is an entire
lost science of working with quartz crystal. But where did it
come from, and where did it go?
Finally, when we stare into its eyes, it is clear that both are
not identical: the left eye is far clearer than the right. It
was in fact while Bennett and his wife stared into the skull’s
eyes, that they felt “it” looked sad. His wife said
she “showed compassion in her gaze” and a name was
born. Both also felt that Compassion held a feminine energy.
Bennett has photographed the skull extensively. Some of the close-ups
have revealed a number of interesting subliminal images that Compassion
conjures up. When the skull was placed on a light-box, one such
image that emerged was of an enigmatic head, while nearby, there
was the outline of a horse’s head.
The
key question is whether Compassion can ever be proven to be ancient.
As mentioned, the likes of Jane Walsh from the Smithsonian have
gone out of their way – abandoning the scientific process
altogether – to argue come what may that all skulls are
of modern origin. Their scientific bias was apparent during the
testing of the Mitchell-Hedges crystal skull in 2008, when one
member of the team straightforwardly proclaimed that the detachable
jaw clearly was and could only be glass. When it was found out
not to be glass soon afterwards, he exclaimed somewhat reservedly
“this did not mean it was crystal” – even though
previous testing by Hewlett-Packard had clearly shown that the
jaw was indeed crystal!
The problem is that crystal is impossible to date, so any dating
needs to happen through other, secondary means. Evidence of tools,
especially the wheel, has been put forward as the key indicator
as to whether a skull is ancient (read: pre-Columbian) or modern.
However much this argument is flawed, it cannot apply to a skull
that comes from Africa – Africa was never an isolated continent,
witnessing the origins of Mankind several tens of thousands of
years ago. The argument only works if we see crystal skulls as
a purely American phenomenon, whereby the wheel is assumed to
have been introduced with the arrival of Western Europeans.
Of course, the skull’s presence in Africa for a number of
decades does not mean it was always there. Equally, the origins
of civilisation in Central America itself remains enigmatic. The
Olmec civilisation dates back to at least 1200 BC, and some have
argued for an African origin to this civilisation. In 1972, Dr.
A. Wiercinski argued that some of the Olmecs were of African origin,
supporting his claim with skeletal evidence from several Olmec
sites. According to Clyde Winters, the Olmecs were from the Mandinka
region of West Africa (north of Namibia). Their language is known
as Mende, the script which was actually found on monuments at
Monte Alban in Mexico. Interestingly, it is at Monte Alban that
evidence has been found that the Mayans were definitely familiar
with crystal artefacts.
Still, the quartz crystal itself having Namibia as its likeliest
origin means that the skull itself must have had an African connection,
wherever it was carved or used. And whereas there are Mayan legends
of how skulls with removable jaws could “sing and talk”
during certain religious ceremonies that were performed in the
many Mayan sanctuaries, the question is which African cultures
held crystal skulls dear.
Little is known about Compassion and seeing its existence is only
known about for a year, most discoveries about it are still to
come. If we were to assume that it is indeed of African origins,
then we are confronted with crystal skulls on both sides of the
Atlantic Ocean, bearing great similarities. Are they evidence
of pre-Columbian contact between the two continents, in which
case the Olmecs are the likeliest candidate, or should we look
at much older origins, including the fabled lost civilisation
of Atlantis?
Those
who have communicated with the skulls – in trance, meditation
or otherwise – keep referring to an Atlantean connection.
During a crystal skull conference in September 2009 – one
of the first public airings of Compassion – Mayan elder
Hunbatz Men was one of the speakers and he became intrigued by
Compassion. Studying the skull closely, he exclaimed “Atlantis!”
He added that there was a matrix in the back of the skull which
showed an ancient map which he did not understand. Several months
later, Bennett realised that the iron oxide layer in the skull
largely resembles a map of the African continent. Coincidence,
or not?
Another psychic who has worked with Compassion is Carole Wilson/Davis.
Wilson originally worked with the Mitchell-Hedges skull, resulting
in “The Skull Speaks”, published in 1985 and one of
the first books to appear on crystal skulls altogether. For Wilson,
the iron oxide came in the shape of a phoenix, spreading its wings,
with a head and a beak in the centre. She added that the information
from Compassion changed, whereas that of the Mitchell-Hedges was
stable – “the same information every day.”
Within
Mayan creation mythology, there is a special role for skulls.
Ancient temple complexes like Chichen Itza are three-dimensional
renderings of the Mayan creation myth. Near the famous pyramid
and ball court is an unimpressive “Platform of the Skull”.
In the creation myth, when playing ball, the Twin Maize Gods disturbed
the lords of Xibalba, the Mayan underworld. The Xibalbans summoned
the Maize Gods to the underworld to answer for their disrespectful
behaviour. There, they subjected them to a series of trials. When
they failed these tests, they were killed and buried in the ball
court of Xibalba. The eldest twin was decapitated, his head hung
in the tree next to the ball court, as a warning to anyone who
might repeat their offence. This was visualised on the Platform
of the Skull. There is no archaeological evidence as to what type
of skull hung there, but seeing it was a divine skull, which spoke
and spat, a crystal skull with a detachable jaw would definitely
have impressed all visitors – in a way any other type of
skull would not have been able to accomplish!
Crystal balls are also used for scrying. Is it possible that Compassion
was used for scrying? The various images that people have seen
inside of her, would thus be parts of the scrying process. And
extended staring in the skull might have placed the person in
a trance. Users of Compassion are sometimes transported to another
reality, for example by staring into its eyes – especially
the left one.
In
the 1980s, when the Central American crystal skulls came to prominence,
various atrocious crimes were committed against the Mayan population
there. In countries like Guatemala, an oppressive regime slaughtered
hundreds of thousands of Mayan people. It took years before the
news of this “Silent Holocaust” became known; throughout
the genocide, Western governments supported the Guatemalan government.
Only able to rely on themselves, the Mayan people began to organise
themselves – becoming terrorists or freedom fighters, depending
on your perspective – and they began to use key dates from
the Mayan calendar for their campaigns, hoping to shake the Mayan
people awake and embrace their true origins and common heritage
– one that transcended the modern borders Western world
powers had created. Sociologists have labelled it the “Mayan
Renaissance”. Today, three decades later, the world is very
much aware of the Mayan calendar – especially its key date,
December 21, 2012 – and millions of people visit the various
Mayan monuments of Central America.
The 2010 World Cup in South Africa was seen as a joyous event
for Africa, showing that Africa is not just a country of civil
war and hunger. There is great joy in a continent that gave us
the Ancient Egyptian civilisation, while Kenya is seen as the
“cradle of Mankind”, for the remains of the earliest
hominids have been found in that country. Twenty years ago, American
bestselling author Kathleen McGowan attended a crystal skull workshop
lead by Susan McCune. McGowan was told that in the future, she
would work with skulls from Africa and that several skulls would
emerge from that continent. When she saw Compassion in July 2010,
McGowan remembered McCune’s prophecy. And if McCune is right,
Compassion is but the first in a series of African skulls that
will make their existence known the world. And with their emergence,
will there be a renewed appreciation for the African continent?
At
this moment in time, Compassion’s existence has already
changed the entire crystal skull debate, showing that the Mitchell-Hedges
skull is not unique in its complexity, and that Central America
is unlikely to be the only origin of crystal skulls. The question
as to the origins of the crystal skulls has therefore been redefined:
did various ancient cultures have them? Did an African civilisation
bring them to the American continent? Or do we need to delve further
back in time, to a lost civilisation, like Atlantis, from which
these skulls originated? A new dawn in crystal skull research
has just broken…
This
article appeared in Atlantis Rising, Issue 84 (November - December
2010), Frontier 94 (17.1, January - February 2011) and Mysteries
Magazin 2011.2 (March 2011).
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