Based in Egypt, the continuing research of the Khemit School of Ancient Mysticism is focused on the implications of the evidence left behind for us to discover by the indigenous and the ancients of Egypt.
Drawing on the expertise of hieroglyphics expert Mohamed Ibrahim and Khemit School Co-Director Yousef Abd’el Hakim Awyan (who has studied ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs his entire life), the Khemit School Team worked tirelessly over recent months, deciphering the mysterious (and hotly disputed) set of around 300 early-Egyptian hieroglyphs carved into remote rock walls in bushland near Gosford NSW, on the east coast of Australia.
Read more here:
wakeup-world.com/2014/10/14/hieroglyphics-experts-declare-ancient-egyptian-carvings-in-australia-authentic/What was its purpose? Are the hieroglyphic symbols older than Egyptian? Does the history need to be changed?
Well what I found is the following:
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These alleged hieroglyphs called Kariong Hieroglyphs due to the fact they are located in the Brisbaine Water National Park, Kariong or Gosford Glyphs due to the nearby community of Gosford are located in the New South Wales in Australia.
According to local residents that have had the opportunity to see and study these hieroglyphs, they seem to be extremely ancient, written in the archaic style of the early dynasties, a style that has been studied very little and is untranslatable by most Egyptologists who have learned to read Middle Egyptian upward. According to the information provided to us, there is only a handful of people on Earth who can actually read and translate this early writing system, making them seem even more valuable to history. But there is another side to this story. According to several archaeologists and researchers, the Gosford Glyphs at Kariong are modern day forgeries that have nothing to do with ancient Egypt. According to the researchers that support the hoax theory, studies undertaken by the NPWS and Macquarie University in 1983 found that the carvings were only a bad amateur attempt at creating some Egyptian engravings, to make things even more mysterious according to the research there were even attempts at making underground chambers during the mid 90’s and there is even evidence documented by the NPWS who found stockpiled materials on site.
An archaeologist named Ray Johnson ( we couldn’t find much or anything about him) had supposedly translated the ancient texts for the Museum of Antiquities in Cairo and was successful in documenting and translating the two facing walls of Egyptian characters – which proved they are from the Third Dynasty. The translation tells the story of a tragic saga of ancient Egyptian explorers that shipwrecked in a strange and hostile land, the death of their royal leader, “Lord Djes-eb”. A group of three framed clusters of glyphs record the name of “Ra-Jedef” as reigning King of the Upper and Lower Nile, son of “Khufu” who is son of the King “Sneferu“.
According to the researchers that support this theory these archaic styles contain early form of hieroglyphics which according to researchers that support the theory that these hieroglyphs are authentic, correlate with archaic Phoenician and Sumerian writing, and according to several other websites, researchers from universities that have looked at these symbols may have perceived them as forgeries not knowing their true value.
Professor Nageeb Kanawiati of the Department of Egyptology had the opportunity to examine the photographs taken by the NPWS in 1983. He states that while some of the work did have Egyptian symbols, the hieroglyphs made no sense at all, as they were merely a collection of Egyptian words and symbols done by amateurs. In 2012 Associate Professor Boyo Ockinga from the Macquarie University’s school of ancient history remarked ” I saw them a few years ago ; there aren’t any connected texts that make any sense at all ” ” People just don’t want to believe they are fake; they want this connection with ancient Egypt to be true , but unfortunately it’s not ” Australian Egyptologist Dr. Gregory P Gilbert looked at images of the Kariong Hieroglyphs in 1998. Dr Gilbert stated: “I recognize these photographs as being from an Australian rock depiction which supposedly has evidence of Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphs. I believe that the inscription is a modern forgery , and not a good one at that. As far as a translation is concerned , the inscription has several features which were copied from several ” modern ” publications of Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphs , however the greater part of the inscription cannot be translated as it is nothing more than a collection hieroglyphs that do not form words or phrases”...."
Source:
www.ancient-code.com/5000-year-old-egyptian-hieroglyphs-found-australia/hoe er I am not sure as to their assertion regarding the nature of the writing itself. I will look somewhat more into the subject.