Utah, the BLM and Uintah County Plan to Desecrate Sego or East Canyon, Utah 
The ancient site known as Sego Canyon is an easy day trip from Moab, Utah. The name "Sego  Canyon Petroglyphs" is a bit confusing because the main panels of  petroglyphs and  pictographs are actually located in Thompson Canyon. From Thompson Springs,
  Utah, take Utah Highway 94 North, which becomes BLM 159 (Thompson 
Canyon Road).  Accessible with any automobile, the gravel road will lead
 you to the unpaved  parking area adjacent to the “Sego Canyon Rock Art”
 site, as Google Maps  identifies it. You may access the main panels 
from the parking area at  39°01'05.3"N 109°42'37.2"W.
 
 Sego Canyon itself begins north of Thompson Springs
 as a  fork of Thompson Canyon. Unless you prepare ahead for off-road 
recovery and dry  camping in the wilderness, do not drive any farther up
 Sego Canyon. In many  places, it either crosses the streambed or 
utilizes the streambed as its  roadway. There are no fresh water sources
 and the road is subject to flash  flooding. The  trail dead-ends at a defunct mining site, along the southern border of the  Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation.
Sego Canyon itself begins north of Thompson Springs
 as a  fork of Thompson Canyon. Unless you prepare ahead for off-road 
recovery and dry  camping in the wilderness, do not drive any farther up
 Sego Canyon. In many  places, it either crosses the streambed or 
utilizes the streambed as its  roadway. There are no fresh water sources
 and the road is subject to flash  flooding. The  trail dead-ends at a defunct mining site, along the southern border of the  Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation.
 
In the year 2014, the sanctity and solitude of Sego Canyon faced 
imminent  demise. For eleven thousand years or more, most early human 
visitors either painted  or carved their visions into the walls of Sego 
Canyon. The result was a series  of interesting and illustrative panels 
unsurpassed in all of the American West. Undaunted by  its sacred and 
serene beauty, the Grand County Council  planned to put a stop to all of that.
 
At that time, all three options in the long-term usage plan for  Grand County Public Lands called for a fifteen mile long, one or two mile  wide transportation corridor straight up Sego Canyon. Commonly called the “Hydrocarbon  Highway”,
 this newly paved and widened road would serve a Mecca of tar sands  
mines planned on property controlled by State of Utah School and 
Institutional  Lands Commission (SITLA). Unless SITLA and Grand County 
agreed upon this blatant  industrialization of the desert, they would 
have no access to the tar sand  deposits that lay beyond the rim of the 
Book Cliffs.
 
Public outcry, both in this blog and throughout the country shamed the Grand  County Council
 into abandoning their reckless plan. Even so, less than five years 
later, the Grand County Council has revived its draconian plan. After 
the embarrassment  engendered by their callous and uncaring plan finally
 receded in local memory, several agencies charged with protecting our 
ancient heritage sites again wish to desecrate them. As the  price of 
crude oil continues to rise, tar sands will become ever more competitive
 in  the marketplace. As prices now rise in 2019, even the local Native 
 American tribe hopes to make the Hydrocarbon Highway plan a reality. 
 
Under the current administration, former Secretary of the Interior  Ryan Zinke  laid waste to nearby Bears Ears National Monument.
 At its inception in 2016,  Bears Ears consisted of 1.35 million acres. 
After Zinke had his way with it,  only 201,876 acres remained under full
 federal protection. After disgraceful  manipulation of both federal 
lands, and the budget of his agency, in January  2019, “Slinky Zinke” 
slithered away into a hoped for obscurity.
 
Yet, like The Terminator, of movie fame, Zinke reemerged from his lair 
in April  2019. This time, he was a newly minted executive and board 
member of  Nevada  based U.S. Gold Corp.
 Their tag line is, “World-Class Projects in Mining  Friendly, U.S. 
Jurisdictions”. Zinke's compensation package included salary and stock 
valued  at more than $100,000 and “expenses” of $120,000 per year. After
 draining his  federal budget to support a lavish and questionable 
jet-setting lifestyle, Zinke  can now spend at a similar rate in the 
private sector. Although forbidden from  lobbying his former agency, 
U.S. Gold Corp. CEO Edward Karr cited Zinke’s  “excellent relationship” 
and “in-depth knowledge of the governmental regulatory  and permitting 
process for mining and exploration companies”. These  relationships and 
knowledge with the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and the Interior  Department were included as justifications for his hiring.
 
Succeeding Zinke in April of 2019,  David Bernhardt
 joined the current  administration as its new Secretary of the 
Interior. After working within the  Department of Interior for many 
years, Bernhardt had more recently served as a  lobbyist for the 
extraction industries. During his tenure as a lobbyist,  Bernhardt's 
clients included  Halliburton, Cobalt International Energy, Samson  Resources, and the Independent Petroleum Association of America. 
In other words, Bernhardt is fully in the pocket of  Old Energy, as represented  by oil, gas and most of all, the “Clean Coal”
 industry. Get ready for Mr.  Bernhardt to push for full-scale 
development of tar sands in the State of Utah.  Although Zinke cannot 
lobby his former federal agency, there are no restrictions  on his 
lobbying the State of Utah School and Institutional Lands Commission (SITLA).
 
SITLA
 owns thousands of acres of potential tar sand mining claims just north 
of  Sego Canyon. If Bernhardt and the likes of Zinke find a way to 
collaborate tacitly on the  extraction of “black gold” from the Sego 
Canyon tar sands, you can bet that they  will. The residents of Grand 
County, Uintah County and the public at large must remain  vigilant. If 
not, the priceless artifacts and ancient artwork within the Sego  Canyon
 Rock Art site could be defiled.
 
The rock art images
  that look down from the walls of Thompson Canyon predate the 
construction of the  Notre Dame Cathedral, which recently burned in 
Paris. With scientists’ inability  to date the earliest pictographs at 
Sego Canyon, those drawings may predate all  human history, including 
the pyramids of Egypt. No one knows for sure. Anyone  who has stood and 
marveled at the unique beauty of Sego Canyon knows that a  paved tar 
sands haul road would forever alter and destroy this ancient and  sacred site.
 
 Who are the people or spirits represented in Sego Canyon? Over the millennia,  several types of rock art appeared
 on the canyon walls, each representing a  successive human culture. 
Some experts claim evidence of human habitation in  Sego Canyon dating 
back to the Archaic Period (6,000 – 2,000 BC). Elsewhere, at  the  Calico Early Man Site,
 near Yermo, California, human made material extracted  from beneath 
100,000-year-old alluvial deposits include a "rock ring". The ring  
dates back to 135,000 years by thermoluminescence (TL), about 200,000 
years by  uranium-series analysis, and about 197,000 years by surface 
beryllium-10 dating.  Since there are no adequate ways to use carbon or 
other dating methods on the  earliest Sego Canyon pictographs, their age
 is indeterminate. For human safety  and protection from vandalism, the 
BLM recently closed Calico Early Man Site to  the public. Until adequate
 funding magically appears, the site will remain off  limits to all.
Who are the people or spirits represented in Sego Canyon? Over the millennia,  several types of rock art appeared
 on the canyon walls, each representing a  successive human culture. 
Some experts claim evidence of human habitation in  Sego Canyon dating 
back to the Archaic Period (6,000 – 2,000 BC). Elsewhere, at  the  Calico Early Man Site,
 near Yermo, California, human made material extracted  from beneath 
100,000-year-old alluvial deposits include a "rock ring". The ring  
dates back to 135,000 years by thermoluminescence (TL), about 200,000 
years by  uranium-series analysis, and about 197,000 years by surface 
beryllium-10 dating.  Since there are no adequate ways to use carbon or 
other dating methods on the  earliest Sego Canyon pictographs, their age
 is indeterminate. For human safety  and protection from vandalism, the 
BLM recently closed Calico Early Man Site to  the public. Until adequate
 funding magically appears, the site will remain off  limits to all.
 
Beginning in an undetermined and ancient age, what we call  Barrier Canyon Style
  rock art panels appeared in Sego Canyon. The Barrier Canyon Style 
included both  pictographs (painted) and petroglyphs (pecked) into the 
rock surface. Some  appear faded and darkened with age, while others 
have a fresher look and appear  similar to red ochre paintings of more 
recent vintage. The dark, faded and  therefore most ancient pictographs 
often have subtle facial expressions and the  appearance of clothing or 
robes.
 
In one image, on the far left side of a larger panel is a dark figure, emerging  from a grass field. Much like an ancient  Sumerian Anunnaki
 (436,000 BC – 3,700  BC), he wears a dark robe and a spiked or pointed 
helmet. Obscured by age and  weathering, his shoulders and countenance 
depict him moving forward and to his  right. Although small in scale, he
 represents an apparently giant figure.  Scanning  down to where his 
arms might be, he appears to have his hands resting on the  shoulders of
 a much smaller and more humanlike figure.
 
The smaller figure, superimposed on the lower half of this “Anunnaki Warrior”
  appears to be walking straight out and into the foreground. He has 
dark, curly  hair and wears a biblical-style flowing robe. Some writings
 reference the “black  headed ones” whom the Anunnaki once ruled. Legend has it that the Anunnaki ruled Gaia,
 our Mother Earth throughout prehistory. Tired of laboring for the scant
  amount of gold available on Earth, the Anunnaki developed a slave 
class, later  known as humankind. As gods on Earth, they may have 
experimented with genetic  engineering, including the recombination of their own DNA with that of “Early  Man”.
 
 So here, on the walls of Sego Canyon, we have a pictographic suggestion of an  Anunnaki god “birthing” Adam into the Garden of Eden.
 Above the very panel  depicting this immaculate birth, are two huge 
portraits, carved in the stone of  the canyon wall. On the left, in 
profile, is  Mother Nature, as represented by a  Nubian woman. To her right, intertwined and looking into her face is the  classical, white bearded Yahweh,
 or the “Face of God”. Here, the contrast of a  dark and a white face 
mimics the Anunnaki “Black Knight” and his progeny Adam, a  white man 
with black hair.
So here, on the walls of Sego Canyon, we have a pictographic suggestion of an  Anunnaki god “birthing” Adam into the Garden of Eden.
 Above the very panel  depicting this immaculate birth, are two huge 
portraits, carved in the stone of  the canyon wall. On the left, in 
profile, is  Mother Nature, as represented by a  Nubian woman. To her right, intertwined and looking into her face is the  classical, white bearded Yahweh,
 or the “Face of God”. Here, the contrast of a  dark and a white face 
mimics the Anunnaki “Black Knight” and his progeny Adam, a  white man 
with black hair.
 
As depicted, Yahweh and Mother Nature are in love both with each other and with  All that Is.
 The Anunnaki god, depicted beneath the divine couple, appears to  
release Adam into what we now know as our own world. After genetic 
manipulation  and creation of humans as a slave class, the Anunnaki lost
 their final battle in  the Pleiadian or the  Orion Wars,
 around 2,000 BC. Upon banishment from Earth, the Anunnaki  absconded  
with Earth’s available gold and returned to their place of origin at 
Niburu, a brown dwarf  planet (or star system) with a highly elliptical 
orbit around our Sun.
 
Niburu,
 also known as “Planet X”, “Planet Nine” or “Nemesis” continues to  
threaten Earth, as we know it. Niburu has a periodicity that is still in
  question. Depending on your preferred information source, Niburu 
returns for a near-Earth  dash every 3,600 or 11,000 years. As pictured 
by scientists and mystics alike,  Niburu exists as a huge dark ball of 
superheated tar. Periodically, as it  passes close to the Earth, Niburu 
is prone to ejecting great swaths of  semi-molten petroleum. Old 
Testament Biblical accounts of fire  and brimstone raining from the sky 
attest  to this phenomenon.
 
As children, we learned a myth about the origins of terrestrial 
petroleum  deposits. Although that myth is widely believed, the 
petroleum deposits in our Earth  did not come from dinosaurs grazing in 
ancient swampland. Eleven thousand years  ago, or at some multiple of 
that time span, Niburu spewed untold amounts of  boiling tar on to the 
upper reaches of Sego Canyon. As happened in the Bible  Lands, so too 
did the Sego Canyon "Lake of Fire" cool and mix  with the desert sands, 
solidifying and becoming the tar sands, oil and natural  gas  deposits  that we know today. The original "Moabites"
  were a West-Semitic culture, which flourished in the Ninth Century 
BCE, or about  11,000 years ago. That time span would coincide with 
three 3,600 year circuits  of Niburu or one major circuit at around 
10,800 years.
deposits  that we know today. The original "Moabites"
  were a West-Semitic culture, which flourished in the Ninth Century 
BCE, or about  11,000 years ago. That time span would coincide with 
three 3,600 year circuits  of Niburu or one major circuit at around 
10,800 years.
 
Remember, the Anunnaki sought to enslave humankind and extract gold for 
their  wealth and pleasure. Old Energy mavens such as Ryan Zinke, David 
Bernhardt,  Edward Karr and the Uintah County Council have their  sights set on places like Sego Canyon or East Canyon. Our current day “Anunnaki Wannabes”
 seek  the black gold locked in the tar sands of Sego Canyon. If their 
self-serving  ways prevail, they will build their “Hydrocarbon  Highway”
 straight through Sego  Canyon. If so, the ancient depictions of Mother Nature,  Yahweh and the Spirit of the Ancients  found there and nowhere else shall vanish from the Earth.
                   
By James McGillis at 04:28 PM | | Comments (0) | Link

 
