About the Authors

JAMES ERNEST BROWN has been a general contractor for more than fifty years, building everything from large commercial complexes to single-family homes. He has taken a practical approach to construction, as a result, his family-owned construction company has pioneered energy efficient construction. Colorado Dream Homes has won five national awards for energy efficiency in a cold weather climate. He was challenged by a lack of logical understanding about our ancient past that led to a quest to understand how the ancients accomplished super human feats of engineering. Brown has traveled to many parts of the world conducting his research, including Coral Castle, Central and North American Indian sites, and from one end of Egypt to the other. Brown has studied more than 15,000 photos and personally experimented with the ideas presented in his multiple award-winning and critically acclaimed books—Electric Ancient Egyptians and Fire in Middle. It is his hope that rediscovery of ancient information will help modern people regain the knowledge of free and non-polluting energy.

 

 

J. J. HURTAK, Ph.D., Ph.D. and Dr. DESIREE HURTAK, Ph.D., MS. Sc. have researched ancient sites around the world and were principal members of the Schor Expedition that discovered the “Tomb of Osiris” in 1997 on the Giza Plateau, using ground penetrating radar (GPR) and sonar in their investigation of this deepest man-made chamber on the Giza Plateau. They have also worked in the pyramids of Mexico carrying out archaeo-acoustic testing. They are authors of numerous books and articles on topics ranging from the analysis of ancient Egyptian texts to modern physics.

Dr. J.J. Hurtak has earned two PhDs, one from the University of California, and one from the University of Minnesota. He also surveyed the underwater structures off the coast of Okinawa in the area of Yonaguni with Japanese and Australian underwater divers. Drs. Hurtak together have traveled throughout the world to investigate ancient cultures and to work closely with indigenous people, such as the Xavante in Brazil and the Zulu Shaman Credo Mutwa, about whom they recently produced an award-winning documentary called Voice of Africa, for which they received two of the fourteen national and international medals they have been awarded for their films. They also work to bridge the gap between various cultures with an eye towards introducing new technologies and at the same time helping various indigenous cultures maintain their uniqueness within the larger global society.