A review and interpretation of complex language, art, and musical notations gleaned from ancient scripts of unknown origin. Mechanisms of standardization with Asterics.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

I have been introduced to a highly advanced composite language, its structure is extremely mathematical and highly capable of artistic structure, however between the horribly bad medium of transport and its intrinsic high complexity, I have been able only to recreate the main characteristics from various examples. There are thousands more from this source, however I have not yet identified any specific language or cultural group that is dominant. The language families range the entire asian continent but are all pre-modern arabic influences and prior the transitions to current chinese and indian structure (pre-colonial). The latest confirmed date is in the 1700s ad for the data set, earliest explicit reference is in the 600s AD.

Please see these sets, especially the g00** images, which is following the scientific guides of a 12/6/5/4/3/2 partitioned space that were extrapolated from the sources and also have been correlated to studies of sculpture and artistic representation both with and without explicit language characters.

http://bigeye.us/scribe/

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I would appreciate insight as to what groups or type of language(s) this is, there is high affinity to hugely widespread religious groups, but the structure of all of the source data is explicitly inclusive of multiple language structures that are somewhat or totally incompatible with eachother, their layout appears to be intended for symetrical translation....

Please contact me via email PELODIC@gmail.com with any and all hints/clues asap, I will be creating a digitization system to attempt to model this structure, but it would help to at least know what it might be. Also advisories on software that can do correlations and image recognition. There is a "Bean" character that is only infrequently used in arabic, that is prominent in the vertical scripts, along with some structures that are very close to old mongolian script (vertical) ... the majority of characters and script is vertical, typically structured right-left, and has multiple characteristics that include a majority of linguistic structures from across the asian and pacific regions.

Especially interesting and distinctive is this (copied from the originals)
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