From what I can figure out so far from doing various google searches, Cyrus Gordon is an example of a bright man who had a strange hobby. I compared him earlier to Barry Fell, another individual who went around collecting so-called "evidence" of Old World influence in the New World, and who is regarded as a crackpot by real scholars, and that may not be too far off. On the recent thread "The Noose again begins to tighten on the critics" by our beloved coggins, Fell was discussed at some detail.
http://mormondiscussions.com/discuss/vi ... l&start=42
A professional conference was convened in 1977 at Castleton College in Vermont to consider the "evidence" reported in America B.C. Fell was one of the conference participants. A verbatim transcript of the proceedings was kept (Cook, 1987: 85-96). After others of those present had expressed doubts about America B.C. findings, Fell responded - with vehement invective. He charged his critics with being too "damn lazy" to read what he had written, so "ignorant" that they "can't even hold a Phoenician inscription the correct way up," and with being united in a jealous desire to protect their professions' conventional wisdom against the conflicting theories he has been developing. Displaying pictures of petroglyphs he claimed to have found in American caves and deciphered in Celtic Ogam, Fell refused to disclose their location. "As long as I am an unpronounceable person, I am not going to say where they are.
A 1977 review of America B.C. in the New York Times Book Review, by Glyn Daniel, Professor of Archaeology at the University of Cambridge, England, described Fell's contention as "ignorant rubbish," reflecting a "set attitude of mind" that is "almost indistinguishable from a delusion" (Daniel, 1977). In characteristic fashion, the Smithsonian Institute in Washington published in 1978 a calm, reserved, meticulously careful Statement regarding America B.C. Authors Dr. Ives Goddard and Dr. William W. Fitzhugh, of the Institution's Department of Anthropology, listed five different sets of basic factual errors and anachronisms in the controversial volume that make it totally incredible (Goddard and Fitzhugh, 1978).
Professor F. H. Wilhelm Nicolaisen of the State University of New York at Binghamton, recognized expert on place names, has analyzed Fell's claims in America B.C. that the names of various New England towns and rivers are of Irish Celtic origin. Nicolaisen traces these names meticulously and irrefutably back to American Algonquin derivations (Nicolaisen, personal communication).
During the past five years, a number of widely recognized and respected archaeologists and linguists have had an opportunity to review the 1983 Wonderful West Virginia report of the Wyoming and Boone County petroglyphs. So far as appears, they all reject, on what seems to be solid ground, the Fell decipherment and interpretation.
The book "Fraud, Myths, and Mysteries - Science and Pseudoscience in Archaeology" by Kenneth Feder devotes quite a few pages to Barry Fell alone. Not surprisingly, I've met several internet LDS who also refer to Fell as a source.
Cyrus Gordon seems to follow in Fell's footsteps in that he has declared Old World text has been found in several places in the New World, including things viewed as hoaxes by mainstream science, like Bat Creek Stone. I found this comment made by Peter T. Daniels, who is one of the few scholars in the study of writing systems:
Hinz was hardly responsible for the "rehabilitation" of Cyrus Gordon,
whose work on Ugaritic remains the foundation of work on that language
but who was relegated to a minor post at Brandeis University for most of
his career because he insisted on studying connections between the West
and the (Semitic) East. He also had an unusually high tolerance for
crackpottery -- the very first time I met him, in 1979, I asked whether
he actually believed all the stuff he'd written in *Before Columbus* --
and he thought for a moment and replied, "Well, it _could_ be so."
http://www.historykb.com/Uwe/Forum.aspx ... -Triada-95
Now, I did discover one other reference to the "famous" man riding a horse at chichen itza. It's often repeated, like an echo chamber, in the internet world of Mormon apologetics, but it originates from the same source, the webpage that, like a bad zombie movie, keeps coming back to haunt me:
Benjamin Chapman's infamous (to me) essay on the evidence of horses in ancient america. Ugh, not again.
http://2s2.com/chapmanresearch/user/doc ... orses.html
Note the picture of the "bearded man riding a horse" with the caption:
The Above picture of a bearded man and a horse is carved on the Temple of Palques, Chichen Itza, Yucatan Mexico . It was photographed by Otto Done and appeared in The Improvement Era December 1955.
I consider Chapman "infamous" due to his willingness to provide, as evidence, the Ica Stones, which are a well known hoax. Anyone this sloppy should not be relied upon as a serious source.
Hmmm, could this be the FAMOUS horse picture to which crocket refers? I'd bet money on it. The photograph is of such awful quality it isn't possible to see what the picture really is. When I first read Chapman's page I spent hours trying to track down what in the heck this picture really was, with no success whatsoever. If this is really a "man riding a horse", then the photographer is the only person in the world who noticed it, because I can't find one reference to this in scholarly sources (and one of my books focuses quite a bit on chichen itza).
While I may never figure out what Otto Done, the photographer, actually took a picture of, I think it's clear it's not a man riding a horse. Chichen Itza is one of the most famous ancient mesoamerican sites, widely discussed and photographed. Finding clear evidence of a HORSE during the specified time period would be an ASTOUNDING find. It would not be ignored by every real scholar of chichen itza. So, with only this to go on, I suspect that this is a similar situation to those who declare they see elephants on Maya ruins, which are usually, in reality, sculptures of a particular mesoamerica deity with a long, snout-like nose.
And remember, this picture was published in the New Era in 1955. If there was ANYTHING, ANYTHING to it, even the slightest hope that it may be legit, I have zero doubt that John Sorenson would have used it as a source, as would Brant Gardner.