Review: “America B.C.”, By Barry Fell

March 2, 2025

To begin with, I realize this series of books I am reading makes paid scientists like archaeologists and historians crazy. It just doesn’t fit in their books. But, as I have said, like politics realizing the power of podcasts and amateurs, novice people are picking up the pieces. This is the era of the citizen-journalist.

Like amateurs, Barry Fell (a noted biologist and oceanographer) used unorthodox methods to develop his theory of ancient people colonizing the U.S.
Author Fell used linguistics and coded language carved into rock, both in Europe and the Eastern United States. Mainstream archaeologists hate this stuff, but amateurs get the job done. From my reading, this lunkhead believes the data that is presented.

As stated, Fell relies on linguistics, which he mostly learned in Europe, and also readable carvings in special stones, both in Europe and the U.S.
This appears to be a highly unorthodox method, does not fit into history books anywhere, but has the ring of truth. Fell examines various words in Native American language that are almost exactly the same as words in European, Asian or African languages. Author Fell also claims that Egyptian Hieroglyphic symbols were used by Micmac tribes in the Eastern U.S.

“America B.C.” Also suggests that Iberic, Basque and Celtic language and building styles are evident in the U.S. As well as Europe.
In fact, Fell claims that “The Libyan language .. is basically Egyptian combined with the Anatolian roots introduced by the Sea Peoples who invaded Libya .. “

Fell writes “The Polynesian people, like the Libyans themselves, are descended from the Anatolian Sea Peoples who invaded the Mediterranean around 1400 B.C.
“It also explains the occurrence of Greek words in Polynesian tongues.”

Fell weaves quite a tale about the peopling of America, which was touched by Asians, Egyptians, Basque and Celtic, Iberic, and Libyan.
The author really shines when he deciphers ancient Druid etchings in the United States, only found to be slightly different in that the language uses no vowels, which also pins a date on it.

This is quite a story that dovetails nicely with others I am studying. The problem occurs when mainstream historians and archaeologists brand these books as “racist”, because they suggest Euro-types were here well before Columbus, and unrelated to later tribes. The tribes themselves see this as a challenge to their sovereignty.

Sample chapters include:
-America’s Oldest Archives
-The Celts In America
-The Libyans of Zuni
-The Druids of New England
-The Egyptian Presence
-The Algonquins

Hopefully, politics will wane and the truth will remain. There are way too many stone anomalies in both Europe and the U.S. that simply can’t be made by glaciers or random plow etchings.

-John Titus
-Covert Book Report

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