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JMT
Member # 12050
 - posted
but they claim the mummy which was found in the tomb was not a Mongoloid-looking Asian but a "blue-eyed Caucasian". I find it suspicious the archaeologists quickly determined the ethnicity of the mummy without explaining their forensics test. Now my question is if a "white" mummy can be found in Asia 2700 years ago it is just as probable for blacks to have once resided in Asia long after 65k since blacks are the genetic parent of modern Asians.
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Duuuuuude! The world's oldest stash of marijuana has been found in far western China, according to an article in the Journal of Experimental Botany.

An ancient Caucasian people, probably the Indo-European-speaking Yuezhi whose fair-haired mummies keep turning up in Xinjiang province, seem to have buried one of their shamans with a whopping 789 grams of high-potency pot 2,700 years ago.

That's about 28 ounces of killer green bud, worth perhaps $8,000 at today's street prices, and enough to keep Harold and Kumar happy for a couple of days.

"It was common practice in burials to provide materials needed for the afterlife," lead author Ethan B. Russo, a practicing neurologist and prominent medicinal-marijuana advocate based in Missoula, Mont., tells the Canadian Press. "No hemp or seeds were provided for fabric or food. Rather, cannabis as medicine or for visionary purposes was supplied."

But the researchers couldn't tell if the weed was meant to be smoked or eaten. No pipes, bongs or rolling papers were found in the tomb.

The ancient Greek historian Herodotus relates how the Scythians, Iranian-speaking nomads who roamed the steppes to the west of the Yuezhi in the first millennium B.C., liked to throw marijuana onto bonfires to induce trancelike states. It's possible the buried shaman followed similar practices

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,460425,00.html
 
meninarmer
Member # 12654
 - posted
I read publications from both Yale and MIT that analysis of certain ritual ointments and oils contained concentration of cannabis oils used for both Religious rituals and medical purposes. The plant was known as, kaneh-bosm.

Dr Lester Grinspoon and James Bakalar, Marihuana: The Forbidden Medicine. Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 1993.

Todd Mikuriya, MD, Ed, Marijuana Medical Papers. Medi-Comp Press, 1973.
 
astenb
Member # 14524
 - posted
Ha, I saw a documentary on ALL these so called Caucasoid Chinese mummies. They ran DNA test on all of them They were mixed Asians and Indians. Puts the nail on the coffin on that one.
 



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