Clifford Anthony Paiva_BSMRA: Global Distribution of Pyramids: Pagoda Origins (Etiology)
BSM RESEARCH ASSOCIATES HOMEPAGE
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This section tracks the original step function pyramids to the present pagoda design inherent since city-tower complex development. Unless this architectural etiology is tracked properly from the Shinar Valley, the Ark and into pre-deluvian times, the history of mankind on this planet will remain obscure. Dispersion migration commenced approximately 350 years after the Genesis Flood and deposition of the Ark at the 16,300 foot altitude of Mt. Ararat. The CIA connection to the barge-ship is noted in these science pages. (Clifford A. Paiva Resume).
Clifford A. Paiva_BSMRA: Pyramid_Tower_Pagoda Etiology.doc
Clifford A. Paiva_BSMRA: Japanese Pyramid Pagoda Searchlight Masts.doc
Clifford Anthony Paiva_BMSRA_ PRIMARY RESUME 2009.doc 
Global Distribution of City-Tower Complexes; Shinar (Babel) Communications Breakdown


Cliff: Pagoda-Towers are traced back to the Shinar-Babel plains in Iraq some 300-400 years after Shem, Ham and Japheth (and their descendents) left the Mt. Ararat area in modern northern Turkey, into the lower lands (Iraq). The engineering architecture formulated by Nimrod (Noah's great-grandson through Ham and Cush) has developed from the strong basic globally distributed pyramid-towers, through modified smaller pyramids and pagodas. Note From Wikipedia: The Pagoda mast was a type of superstructure common on WW-II Japanese Imperial Navy warships, reconstructed during the 1930s, in a bid to improve their fighting performance by use of pyramid search light platforms. United States submarine periscopes were particularly susceptible to the search light danger posed by the Japanese Imperial Navy. The Imperial Navy improvements were deemed necessary owing to the "Battleships Holiday" imposed by the Washington Naval Treaty, prohibiting the construction of new battleships until the Treaty's expiration in 1936. Pagoda masts featured a mass of platforms, including watch points, very powerful searchlights (10,000 meter range), and spotting points. They were constructed on the majority of ships rebuilt by the Japanese, including the Kong Class battlecruisers and the Hyuga and Nagato Class battleships. The additional platforms were supported on the ships' original tripod foremasts, used extensively by the United States Royal Navies (10/18/09)