Gold Bar
The bar is largely a straight band, although four sections jut out at right angles into short spurs or squared off spirals. the surface is imprinted with a series of non-repeating geometric shapes, mostly squares and rectangles, with no obvious meaning to them. None of these shapes resemble any known form of writing. The pattern does resemble other artifacts of Tiwinaku origin that have been seen recently.
The bar is made of worked metal but both ends are rough, as though the piece was ripped or broken from a larger design. The metal appears to be gold.
History
At this time the origin of the bar is unknown. It was last seen inside a broken crate in the storage basement of the Museo de Arqueolgía y Antropología.
An attempt was made to remove the object from the museum on March 21, 2021.
Significance
Just the kind of thing one expetcts to find in a museum.
When first discovered the bar had a dried material stuck to it in places. Doctor Floyd Musgrove identified the substance as burnt skin.
Nigel Hudson Wallace Farnsworthy IV once had a dream in which he was holding this metal bar. At that time Nigel had seen the object but not handled it.
Item type
Art
Current Location
Weight
25 lbs (11 kg)
Dimensions
2' long, 3" wide, 1/3" thick (60cm x 7.5cm x 1 cm)
Base Price
It belongs in a museum?
Related Myths
Related Reports
Session 2 Notes
Session 6 Notes
Session 8 Notes
Session 13 Notes
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