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Ancient Greek statue “Using phone” proves time travel is real

Ancient Greek statue “Using phone” proves time travel is real

Ancient Greek statue “Using phone” proves time travel is real

Ancient Greek statue “Using phone” proves time travel is real

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  • Grave Naiskos Of An Enthroned Woman With An Attendant, a 37-inch marble statue.
  • Experts dismissed a plot that a statue depicts a woman using a laptop.
  • The J. Paul Getty Museum in Malibu, California, displayed the sculpture in 100BC.
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An ancient Greek statue of a lady “using a phone” has been called “evidence of time travel.” Experts dismissed a plot that a statue depicts a woman using a modern laptop with USB connections. Incredibly, the “evidence” of time travel was sculpted in 100BC.

The J. Paul Getty Museum in Malibu, California, displays Grave Naiskos Of An Enthroned Woman With An Attendant, a 37-inch marble statue. A slave holds a thin folding box while a woman sits in an armchair in the sculpture. As her marble eyes look up, the mistress touches the box’s tip.

Some have suggested that the box is a laptop screen since it has two holes that look like USB ports or cable inputs. A conspiracist YouTube channel claims the base is too shallow for a jewellery box.

The video said the statue “depicts an astonishing object that bears a striking resemblance to a modern laptop or some handheld device”.

However, they provide a more realistic explanation: “When I look at the sculpture I can’t help but think about the Oracle of Delphi, which was supposed to allow the priests to connect with the gods to retrieve advanced information.”

Experts called this analysis more realistic. A historian’s exhibition description said the sculpture depicted the woman’s gravesite peering into a “shallow breast”. Funerary art during the time featured funeral markers. It hoped loved ones would enjoy Earthly pleasures in the afterlife.

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In Forbes, archaeologist Kristina Killgrove said the object could be writing wax tables. She stated that the side holes may have held rotting wooden things. Gallery visitors and the internet have identified time travel in artworks before.

Ferdinand George Waldmüller’s 1860 masterpiece “The Expected One” was criticised for depicting a woman “holding an iPhone.” The charming picture depicted a young woman “scrolling an iPhone” in the countryside. The woman was actually reading a prayer book, according to art critics.

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