Crichton E M Miller FCILT, FSA Scot was born in Glasgow, Scotland, 1949. is a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport and a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries Scotland .
For his contribution to forgotten history, he was invested as a Knight in the Order of the Fleur de Lys first formed in 1439AD and In the Order of St James De Altopascio formed in1069AD.
Crichton had patented the wheel cross in 2002 as a Bronze Age surveying, astronomical and navigation instrument to keep time and calendar over five thousand years ago using astrology that eventually became astronomy
His book explains how stone circles and pyramids all over the world were built to keep time and calendar by the stars sun and moon,with an ancient instrument that is left in full view of the public..
In the second edition of his best selling book, The Golden Thread of Time, Crichton describes 4500-year-old artefacts discovered in the Pyramid of Khufu used by the architect Khufu's vizier, Hemiunu who is credited with the design.
Crichton goes on to describe how astrology and the remarkable instrument for time keeping, navigation and architecture helped the Mesopotamians, Egyptians, Phoenicians, Greeks, Vikings, Christianity and the later Knight Templar to build their civilisations and why they believed in reincarnation and resurrection as the nature of time..
Crichton's ground breaking book opens the historical protectionism of secret Guilds and Orders, who preserved the lost and forgotten methods of the ancients while challenging inducted cognitive bias which prevents people from seeing the obvious.
His discoveries were published in many newspapers including the Scotsman, Coventry Evening Telegraph, interviews on BBC Radio Scotland, Talk Radio, Teide TV and many others with many lectures, demonstrations, films and interviews, including demonstrations at Cambridge University in 2006.
Read by Alumni in 110 Universities, he brings it to the public, don't miss it
His research is published in his ground breaking book, The Golden Thread of Time.