You shouldn't cite things that you don't understand as "evidence". Take traditional Mayan belief systems for instance. They didn't involve any ideas about space travel or panspermia. The many different stories we have remaining broadly agree on a few themes that are shared with many other American cultures, namely that mankind was created by the gods out of natural materials (often corn or clay), which serves as moral reinforcement for our intimate connection to the earth.
The pleiades also weren't seen as the direction of a planet humans came from, they're just religiously important stars that may mark the date of creation. The qualifier may is used here because documentary evidence records this belief around the contact period, but it's not known whether it was believed when the calendars were initially created. The Mayans were fantastic astronomers and absolutely could have worked backwards from a later date.
I studied personally with Hunbatz Men in Mexico. Learned of the calendaring system linked to the travels of the celestial bodies and how the pyramids are 72,000 year calendars...
A centurian in the Mayan Order, studying their rites and symbolism.
Ive read many Rosicrucian Lessons, and books like that of Weed.
The pleiades also weren't seen as the direction of a planet humans came from, they're just religiously important stars that may mark the date of creation. The qualifier may is used here because documentary evidence records this belief around the contact period, but it's not known whether it was believed when the calendars were initially created. The Mayans were fantastic astronomers and absolutely could have worked backwards from a later date.