I went to a talk today by Dr. Albert Lin about The Valley of the Khans Project, which is a project going on in my building at UCSD in collaboration with Mongolian archaeologists and the Mongolian government. It is quite fascinating — the Burkhan Khaldun is very remote, and the entire process has to be non-invasive, so he is using satellite imaging (visible and multispectral) to locate anomalous (= man-made) structures in the target region. This summer he wants to go back into the field to get more close-range readings.
Albert Lin?!
(I’m going to go out on a limb and guess that it’s not the same Albert Lin.)
Well, not there looking for the tomb of Genghis Khan – that’s it, and can not find it. Very most likely, it is in other part of Eurasia. As a matter of fact, most of the descendants of Genghis Khan and hisnative nation, living now among the Bashkirs, Kazakhs, Tatars, and other Turkic peoples.
Read a book “Forgotten Heritage of Tatars” (by Galy Yenikeyev) about the hidden real history of Tatars and their fraternal Turkic peoples. This e-book you can easily find on Smashwords company website.
Мең билге:
Unfortunately, in the official history there are many pro-Chinese falsifications about “a war between the Tatars and Genghis Khan” etc.
So probably not there looking for the tomb of Genghis Khan – that’s it, and can not find it. Very most likely, it is in other part of Eurasia. As a matter of fact, most of the descendants of Genghis Khan and hisnative nation, living now among the Bashkirs, Kazakhs, Tatars, and other Turkic peoples.
Read a book “Forgotten Heritage of Tatars” (by Galy Yenikeyev) about the hidden real history of Tatars and their fraternal Turkic peoples. This e-book you can easily find on Smashwords company website: http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/175211
There are a lot of previously little-known historical facts, as well as 16 maps and illustrations in this book.
On the cover of this book you can see the true appearance of Genghis Khan. It is his lifetime portrait, which is very little known.