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Best Super Bowl Ad 24

[video=youtube;heIwZSzuTHM]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=heIwZSzuTHM[/video]
This is not AD 24 silly. Dilly Dilly not uploaded.

LORD God Almighty's Super Bowl ad Pulled by NFL

HM Queen Elizabeth II had NFL pull Our AD 24 (refund $5.5 million)
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/soc.history.ancient
SHE'S A ****ING **** HOLE ! ! ! ! ! ! !
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/sci.archaeology
________________________________________________

The Longest Pit Stop Ever
by Preston Tucker

BEST SUPER BOWL AD 24
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=heIwZSzuTHM

We liked Tucker Corporation's Race Car AD 24 the best. The One where Moses, the Father of Texas, is pointing due West from atop Pisgah on Mount Nebo, then it flashes to Ark of the Covenant electro-magnetic Race Car driver Moses peeling out of there making a Pit Stop at the Heel Stone underground Garage of Stonehenge, next crossing the Atlantic Ocean atop the Spruce Goose landing in Nacogdoches the Oldest Town in Texas, where it drives off Spruce Goose's wing across The Alamo finish line, and ends with Moses, the Father of Texas, smiling at his Ark of the Covenant electro-magnetic Race Car silhouetted by a San Antonio sunset in the Promised Land.

Tucker Corporation's Race Car AD 24 is our favourite.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/30th_parallel_north
Tucker History | The Tucker Automobile Club of America
https://www.tuckercorporation.com
http://garrydenke.tumblr.com

The Alamo: 29.4260° N, 98.4861° W
Mount Nebo: 31.7683° N, 35.7253° E

Perhaps a 48 inch oil field pipe wrench rammed up Her ass and out Her mouth would help?
It would give Her some 'jaws' with 'teeth' instead of flapping Her gums. Whaddaya think?
https://www.gasandsupply.com/i/RIDGID-Straight-Pipe-Wrenches-31040-_RID31040

YHWH Allah LORD God
Howard R. Hughes, Sr.
Walter B. Sharp, Sr.
Howard Hughes, Jr.
________________________________________________

I wouldn't give a bucket of piss for her future!
https://www.pinterest.com/garrydenke/
https://www.pinterest.com/gdenke/
http://garrydenke.tumblr.com/

Queen **** on the Run from her own Country
https://www.foxnews.com/world/queen...rexit-unrest-breaks-out-in-london-reports-say
Queen **** on the Run from her own Country
https://popculture.com/trending/201...vacuated-secret-location-civil-unrest-brexit/
Queen **** on the Run from her own Country
https://www.reuters.com/article/uk-...-in-case-of-brexit-unrest-media-idUSKCN1PS005
Queen **** on the Run from her own Country
https://www.express.co.uk/news/roya...st-update-no-deal-brexit-leave-EU-london-riot

Run, money whore, run!
Roland Totera, Sr.
________________________________________________

:soap

Major Tom
 
THE COMPLETE HISTORY OF STONEHENGE EXCAVATIONS
- part 1 of 2

1611. King James VI and I investigated Stonehenge to see "The stone which the builders refused", "The stone which the builders reiected", and "the stone which the builders disallowed".
King James Version: 1611
1616. Doctor William Harvey, Gilbert North, and Inigo Jones find horns of stags and oxen, coals, charcoals, batter-dashers, heads of arrows, pieces of rusted armour, rotten bones, thuribulum (censer) pottery, and a large nail.
Long, William, 1876, Stonehenge and its Barrows.
The Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine, Volume 16
1620. George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham, dug a large hole in the ground at the center of Stonehenge looking for buried treasure. (Diary)
1633-52. Inigo Jones conducted the first 'scientific' surveys of Stonehenge.
Jones, I, and Webb, J, 1655, The most notable antiquity of Great Britain vulgarly called Stone-Heng on Salisbury plain.
London: J Flesher for D Pakeman and L Chapman
1640. Sir Lawrence Washington, knight, owner of Stonehenge, fished around Bear's Stone (named after Washington's hound dog). Bear's Stone profile portrait a local 17th century attraction. (G-Diary)
The Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine, Volumes 15-16
1652. Reverend Lawrence Washington, heir of Stonehenge, commissions Doctor Garry Denke to dig below Bear's Stone, reveals lion, calf (ox), face as a man, flying eagle, bear (dog), leopard, and hidden relics. Bear's Stone (96) renamed Hele 'to conceal, cover, hide'. (G-Diary)
1653-6. Doctor Garry Denke auger cored below Hele Stone 'The stone which the builders rejected' on various occasions. Gold, silver, brass, iron, wood, bone, concrete discovered at 1-1/3 'yardsticks' (under flying eagle). Elizabeth Washington, heir of Stonehenge.
Denke, G, 1699, G-Diary (German to English by Erodelphian Literary Society of Sigma Chi Fraternity). GDG, 1-666
1666. John Aubrey surveyed Stonehenge and made a 'Review'. Described the Avenue's prehistoric pits. (the 'Aubrey Holes' discovered by Hawley, not Aubrey).
Aubrey, J, 1693 (edited by J Fowles 1982), Monumenta Britannica. Sherborne, Dorset: Dorset Publishing Co
1716. Thomas Hayward, owner of Stonehenge, dug heads of oxen and other beasts. (Diary)
1721-4. William Stukeley surveyed and excavated Stonehenge and its field monuments. Surveyed the Avenue in 1721 extending beyond Stonehenge Bottom to King Barrow Ridge. Surveyed the Cursus in 1723 and excavated.
Stukeley, W, 1740, Stonehenge: a temple restor'd to the British druids. London: W Innys and R Manby
1757. Benjamin Franklin observes the Hele Stone (96) "Seven Heads": lion, calf (ox), face as a man, flying eagle, bear (dog), leopard, and sardine; "Ten Horns": Altar of Burnt Offering (4 horns), Altar of Incense (4 horns), and Torah scroll (2 horns); and all of the other 'hidden' relics buried there. (Diary)
1798. Sir Richard Hoare and William Cunnington dug at Stonehenge under the fallen Slaughter Stone 95 and under fallen Stones 56 and 57.
The Ancient History of Wiltshire, Volume 1, 1812
1805-10. William Cunnington dug at Stonehenge on various occasions.
Cunnington, W, 1884, Guide to the stones of Stonehenge. Devizes: Bull Printer
1839. Captain Beamish excavated within Stonehenge. (Diary)
1874-7. Professor Flinders Petrie produced a plan of Stonehenge and numbered the stones.
Petrie, W M F, 1880, Stonehenge: plans, description, and theories. London: Edward Stanford
1877. Charles Darwin digs at Stonehenge to study 'Sinking of great Stones through the Action of Worms'.
Darwin, Charles, 1881, The Formation of Vegetable Mould, Through the Action of Worms, with Observations on Their Habits. London: John Murray
1886. Kaiser Wilhelm Society founder 33° mason Friedrich Wilhelm Denke confirmed with his auger drilled core samples (under bear, leopard and calf) Gold, silver, brass, iron, wood, bone and concrete 4 feet (1.2 meter) beneath Stonehenge Hele Stone base. (FW-Diary)
1901. Professor William Gowland meticulously recorded and excavated around stone number 56 at Stonehenge.
Gowland, W, 1902, Recent excavations at Stonehenge. Archaeologia, 58, 37-82
1919-26. Colonel William Hawley extensively excavated in advance of restoration programmes at Stonehenge for the Office of Works and later for the Society of Antiquaries. Hawley excavated ditch sections of the Avenue, conducted an investigation of the Slaughter Stone and other stones at Stonehenge, and discovered the 'Aubrey Holes' (misnamed) through excavation.
Hawley, W, 1921, Stonehenge: interim report on the exploration. Antiquaries Journal, 1, 19-41
Hawley, W, 1922, Second report on the excavations at Stonehenge. Antiquaries Journal, 2, 36-52
Hawley, W, 1923, Third report on the excavations at Stonehenge. Antiquaries Journal, 3, 13-20
Hawley, W, 1924, Fourth report on the excavations at Stonehenge, 1922. Antiquaries Journal, 4, 30-39
Hawley, W, 1925, Report on the excavations at Stonehenge during the season of 1923. Antiquaries Journal, 5, 21-50
Hawley, W, 1926, Report on the excavations at Stonehenge during the season of 1924. Antiquaries Journal, 6, 1-25
Hawley, W, 1928, Report on the excavations at Stonehenge during 1925 and 1926. Antiquaries Journal, 8, 149-76
(Diary)
Pitts, M, Bayliss, A, McKinley, J, Boylston, A, Budd, P, Evans, J, Chenery, C, Reynolds, A, and Semple, S, 2002, An Anglo-Saxon decapitation and burial at Stonehenge.
Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine, 95, 131-46

- part 1 of 2
 
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