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The Bosnian pyramid claims are pseudoarchaeological [1] theories put forward to explain the formation of a cluster of natural hills in the area of Visoko in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. [2] Since 2005, [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Semir Osmanagić , a Bosnian-American businessman [ 2 ] based in Houston, Texas , [ 4 ] has claimed that these hills are the ...
Semir Osmanagić (born June 1, 1960), also known as Sam Osmanagich, is a Bosnian businessman and author.He is best known for promoting his pseudo-archaeological project in central Bosnia (near the town of Visoko) related to the so-called "Bosnian pyramids".
Visočica hill came to international attention in October 2005, following a campaign to promote the scientifically unsupported idea that it is the largest of a group of ancient man-made pyramids. This idea originated with Houston-based expatriate Bosnian author and businessman Semir Osmanagić who has since turned the site into a tourist ...
Scientific investigations of the site show there is no pyramid. [22] [23] [24] Additionally, scientists have criticised the Bosnian authorities for supporting the pyramid claim saying, "This scheme is a cruel hoax on an unsuspecting public and has no place in the world of genuine science." [25]
The Bosnian pyramids project, which has projected that several hills in Visoko, Bosnia are ancient pyramids. Piltdown Man. Jovan I. Deretić's Serbocentric claims for the ancient history of the Old World.
Bosnian pyramid complex: Unproven claim that there is a pyramid complex in the vicinity of town of Visoko in Bosnia, made by ancient Bosnians. Eltanin Antenna: Actually a sponge. [55] [56] Eoliths: Miocene knapped flint nodules mistaken in the 19th century for extremely primitive stone tools, which helped back the authenticity of Piltdown Man.
As for your videos, voicing an opinion which opposes yours on each of your videos is not spam, I included valid sources that debunk the Pyramid claims on all videos that only contained Pro- Bosnian pyramid claim comments, not just yours, so that there would be at least 1 scientific comment amongst a whole load of misinformation so that others ...
Keep in mind that in spite of Osmanagić's claims, the government of Bosnia is in fact funding what is essentially tourist income, but these qualified experts who "attend" the site and say things which appear on the sign as endorsements in Osmanagić's YouTube video (Dr. Sam Osmanagich: Bosnian Pyramids - My Story) are either vastly misquoted ...