PINDORAMA, & Ancient Human Trails.
Family saga covering from prehistory to the early 1600s.
Her 1st book – PINDORAMA & ANCIENT HUMAN TRAILS.
Family and research, 413 pages, written initially in English and translated by the author herself into Portuguese, and released in 2017.
This book is the result of the surprising discovery by the author, who previously saw herself mainly as a descendant of Portuguese, and to a lesser extent English, of an indigenous ancestor who lived about 180 years in the past. Having identified this ancestor as from the Krenac tribe, she then researched the origin of this people also known as the Bocutudos, who speak the Gê language. Studying about them, she soon became interested in their origin, and followed their trail through time and space, thus discovering little-known information about the settlement of the American continent before European colonization.
It is believed that the Krenac people arrived in South America as early as 13,000 years before the present, many millennia before the Tupi or Guarani people, and that they are related to the Clovis people – the oldest inhabitants of North America. Thus, led by linguistics and other sciences, the author followed the Krenac trail from the South American continent to North America, and then through the Bering Strait to Mongolia and finally to Eritrea, on the African continent.
The author also researches the origin of other peoples who crossed the Pacific Ocean in primitive times, such as the Australian and Asian aborigines, and the Atlantic Ocean, such as the Africans, who were already on the continent long before 1500. There are also indications of that the Chinese, the Vikings were on the American continent even before the colonizers.
The second part of this book finally presents the prehistoric origin of the other peoples who arrived on the continent before 1600, such as the Portuguese, French, Spanish, English, Dutch, but also the Israelis and the Gypsies. And in the spirit of a family saga, the author shows how many of these former emigrants were part of her own family through the centuries.