24 - 18
18 - 12
12 - 6
6 To 0
300 Thousand
30 - 0

60 X
AD,

100,000 year Mayan age 105 - 5
5000 year Mayan Age
2nd Great year 25.92
1st Great year 25,920
Aries
Pisces
Aquarius
Capricorn
Sag
Scorpio
Libra
Virgo
Leo
Cancer
Gemini
Taurus
Aries
Picses
Pleistocene Epoch 1.8 million - 10 K pleistocene
Holocene Epoch 10,000 years ago to present holocene epoch
People from Mu migrate to Central & South America. 52 - 12
   
Neanderthal
 
- 30 - 20 Atlantis loses land and becomes one island with a chain of islands connecting it to North American continent. Atlanteans move to lands around Atlantic Ocean. Lemuria looses a great deal of its land.
- 30 Nacaals (priests from Mu) migrate to India & Tibet.
- Pole shift.
- 28 Oldest boomerang.
- 27 Neanderthals die out, leaving Homo sapiens as only living species of genus Homo.
- 25.92 One Great Year ago. Astrological age cycle crossing Galactic plane. Solar systems revolution around Sirius.
- 30.24 - 28.08 Age of Aries
- 28.08 - 25.92 Age of Pisces
- 25.92 - 23.76 Age of Aquarius
- 23.76 - 21.6 Age of Capricorn
- 21.6 - 19.44 Age of Sagitarius
- 19.44 - 17.28 Age of Scorpio
- 22 Large Atlantean settlement in the Bahama Bank area.

- 17.28 - 15.12 Age of Libra
- 15.12 - 12.96 Age of Virgo
- 12.96 - 10.8 Age of Leo
- 10.8 - 8.64 Age of Cancer
- 8.640 - 6.480 Age of Gemini
- 10 Humans reach Tierra del Fuego at tip of South America, last continental region to be inhabited by humans (excluding Antarctica).
- 10,000 - Present Holocene Epoch holocene epoch
- 5114 - 1755 AD 5000 year long Mayan age
- 6.48 - 4.32 Age of Taurus
- 4.320 - 2.160 Age of Aries
- 2160 years ago - 12-21-2012
Age of Picses
54 - 48
48 - 42
42 - 36
36 - 30
300 Thousand
60 - 30

6000 X
AD,

100,000 year Mayan age 105 - 5
3rd Great year 77.76 - 51.84
2nd Great year 51.84 - 25.92
Pleistocene Epoch 1.8 million - 10 K pleistocene
Neanderthal Man, in Africa & Europe 100 - 27 neandethal
 
People from Mu migrate to Central & South America. 52 - 12
- 60 Birth of Y-chromosomal Adam in Africa (most likely Ethiopia or Sudan). He is most recent common ancestor from whom all male human Y chromosomes are descended.
Y-chromosomal Adam is not same individual at all points in human history. most recent common patrilineal ancestor of humans alive today is different from one for humans who will be alive a thousand years in future: as male lines die out, a more recent individual, Y-mrca of a subtree of preceding Y-Adam, becomes new Y-Adam.
- 57 Cro-Magnons in Europe.

- 54 - 52.722 Conferences of five nations about wild troublesome animals.
- 54 - 52 Atlantean technology advances.
- 52 Pole shift. Mu & Atlantis lose land to sea.
- Atlantis becomes five islands.
- 52 - 12 People from Mu migrate to Central & South America.
- 50 Modern humans expand from Asia to Australia & Europe. Expansion along coasts happens faster than expansion inland.
- 37 Sophisticated cave art in southwestern Europe & South America
- Writings on stone or burnt clay tablens in India & Tibet.

- 32 Cave art in Brazil.
- 31 Modern humans enter North America from Siberia in numerous waves, some later waves across Bering land bridge, but early waves probably by island-hopping across Aleutians. At least two of first waves had left few or no genetic descendants among Americans by time Europeans arrived across Atlantic Ocean. Humans reach Solomon Islands. Humans move into Japan.
- M343, a genetic marker, first appears. This marker is estimated to have originated in an individual male in Africa 30,000 or more years ago & has propagated since then. This genetic marker is carried by most Western Europeans. It is carried by 70% of entire population of England & 90% of some parts of Spain & Ireland & is also descended from Cro-Magnon.

84 - 78
78 - 72
72 - 66
66 - 60
300 Thousand
90 - 60

6000 X
AD,

4th Great year 103.68 - 77.76
3rd Great year 77.76 - 51.84
Pleistocene Epoch 1.8 million - 10 K pleistocene
Neanderthal Man, in Africa & Europe 100 - 27 neandethal
   
- 74 Supervolcanoic eruption in Toba, Sumatra, Indonesia cause Homo sapiens population to crash to an estimated 2,000. 6 year nuclear winter, then a 1000 year ice-age.
- 72 Uighurs to north of Burma from Gobi area.
 

 

114 - 108
108 - 102
102 - 96
96 - 90
300 Thousand
120 - 90

6000 X
AD,

2 Million year Mayan age 2 M - 105 K
100,000 year Mayan age 105 - 5
5th Great year 129.6 - 103.68
4th Great year 103.68 - 77.76
Pleistocene Epoch 1.8 million - 10 K pleistocene
   
Neanderthal Man, in Africa & Europe 100 - 27 neandethal
      - 102 or before - Modern homo sapiens in Europe.

 

144 - 138
138 - 132
132 - 126
126 - 120
300 Thousand
150 - 120

6000 X
AD,

6th Great year 155.52 - 129.6
5th Great year 129.6 - 103.68
Pleistocene Epoch 1.8 million - 10 K pleistocene
      - 130 FOXP2 ( gene associated with development of speech) appears.

 

174 - 168
168 - 162
162 - 156
156 - 150
300 Thousand
180 - 150

6000 X
AD,

7th Great year 181.44 - 155.52
6th Great year 155.52 - 129.6
Pleistocene Epoch 1.8 million - 10 K pleistocene
      - 160 Homo sapiens in Ethiopia, Awash River, Herto village, practise mortuary rituals & butcher hippos.

- 150 Birth of mitochondrial Eve in Africa. She is most recent female ancestor common to all mitochondrial lineages in humans alive today.

204 - 198
198 - 192
192 - 186
186 - 180
300 Thousand
210 - 180

6000 X
AD,

9th
8th Great year 207.36 - 181.44
7th
Pleistocene Epoch 1.8 million - 10 K pleistocene
- 233.28 - 207.36 9th Great Year
- 202 People inhabited Atlantis.    
7th Great year 181.44 - 155.52
234 - 228
228 - 222
222 - 216
216 - 210
300 Thousand
240 - 210

6000 X
AD,

10th Great Year 259.92 - 233.28
9th Great Year 233.28 - 207.36
Pleistocene Epoch 1.8 million - 10 K pleistocene
       

 

264 - 258
258 - 252
252 - 246
246 - 240
300 Thousand
270 - 240

6000 X
AD,

11th Great Year 285.84 - 259.92
10th Great Year 259.92 - 233.28
Pleistocene Epoch 1.8 million - 10 K pleistocene
      - 250 Humans created by Annunaki

 

294 - 288
288 - 282
282 - 276
276 - 270
300 Thousand
300 - 270

6000 X
AD,

12th Great Year 311.76 - 285.84
11th Great Year 285.84 - 259.92
Pleistocene Epoch 1.8 million - 10 K pleistocene