Secret Underground Tunnels. Past and Present

Part I
Secret Underground Tunnels Past & Present

The Meso-American Connection

 

Tunnelmania

Over the past few years stories and rumors about government underground tunnels, bases and cities have dominated much of the talk and energy of those of us seeking the truth about things our government and others seem to work very hard to keep secret.

Probably Richard Sauder presented the best research into these matters in his well written book Underground Bases and Tunnels: What is the Government Trying to Hide? (1993). This book is a must read for anyone interested in the subject.

However, each time I read something on these underground activities one question keeps coming to my mind. Why aren’t these modern researchers looking at the connections between today’s top-secret goings on and the tunnels that have existed inside our earth since before written history?

Many of today’s reported underground activities seem to be centered around some of the same areas that ancient excavations are known to be located. For instance, in and around White Sands New Mexico and the “Four Corners” area of the country.

Before we go too far into this aspect of the mystery we’ll have to study a little of the true history of the Americas.


A Historical Perspective

Containment of the population is the important ingredient in total control. It is natural for people to migrate to new lands seeking a better life for their families.

Unfortunately, for those who would control us this natural migration delays the master plan of a One World Order. This is well known by the elitist and for centuries, through their control of the top echelon in secret societies, education and religious sects they were able to keep the true makeup of our earth a secret from the common men and women.

In early times this was accomplished by leading the masses into believing that the earth was flat. They warned that if anyone tried to leave the known world they would fall off the edge, or worst yet … meet up with horrible monsters that would maul them and eat them. Prior to 1492 the secret societies and financial controllers of the Old World had no trouble hiding the truth about the true makeup of our planet. Two things changed all that. The Queen of Spain was greedy. And Christopher Columbus had the gift of gab.

Columbus talked Isabelle into defying the other elitist and financing a trip to explore the secret lands and return with tons of wealth. With the so-called “discovery of the New World” the keepers of the secrets had a lot of problems. One being the civilized people of the Americas knew and understood about the Inner lands and its inhabitantsour Co-Planetarians.

The cover-up (no pun intended) started right away.


The Book Burners

The first people allowed into the new word were religious teachers.

Under the guise of converting the heathens to Christianity, groups such as the Jesuits main objective was to destroy any records, books etc. they located. The excuse was to rid the savages of their superstitions and belief in “false gods.” One of the first big lies in the conspiracy is still believed by many of us today. We have been taught to believe that the Meso-Americans, the first Americans, had no books. No written records of they’re history and accomplishments.

This is simply not true.

In Ancient America, in Notes of America Archeology (1872) by John H. Baldwin, A.M., he wrote:

“If a conservative history of the ancient people of Central America and Mexico were ever written, it has been lost … The ruins show that they had the art of writing … the inscriptions of Palenque and the characters used in some of the manuscript books that have been preserved are not the same as the Mexican Picture Writing … though they had no writing like ours they had their symbols and characters through which they understood everything; and they had great books, which were composed with such ingenuity and art that our characters were really of no assistance to them.

Our Priests have seen these books and I myself have seen them likewise … books such as these … must have contained important information. The older books belonging to the age of Copan and Paling went to decay doubtless long previous to this time. The later books, not otherwise lost, were destroyed by Aztec and Spanish vandalism.”

Mr. Baldwin continues:

“ … The Aztec or Mexican sovereign Ytzcoatl destroyed many of the old Toltec books. His aim was probably to exterminate among the people all memory of the previous times … We learn from Spanish writers that a still greater destruction of the old books was effected by the more ignorant and fanatical of the Spanish priest who were established in the country as missionaries after the conquest … there is record of a great conflagration, under the asepses of Bishop Zumarraga, in which a vast collection of these writings was consumed.

As the writing was all of paper (which had long been used in the country) the burning was easily accomplished … the Franciscan and Dominican fanatics, whose learning and religion consisted of ignorance and bigotry, hoped to exterminate among the people all recollection of their former history, ideas and religious customs.””

(Pages 188, 189).

Very few of these books were saved. However I found a passage in The Civilization of Ancient Mexico (1912) by Lewis Spence to be very thought provoking to say the least.

Mr. Spence reports that in the Vatican there is a book that was brought from Mexico …

“Manuscript No. 3773, is a species of religious handbook, representing the journey after death through the underground.”

(Page 21)

Out of all of the books put to torch by the Christian Priests why was this book about the Ancient American’s beliefs concerning the Inner World brought safely back to the Vatican? Next time you’re in Rome ask the Pope.

But it isn’t all gloom and doom. In Mr. Baldwin’s already quoted book Ancient America I found a passage that could be viewed as a ray of hope.

“Humbolt mentions books of hieroglyphic writing found among the Panoes on the River Ucayali, [in Peru] which were “bundles of their paper resembling our volumes of the quarto. A Franciscan missionary found an old man sitting at the foot of a palm-tree and reading one of the books to several young persons. The Franciscan was told that the writing “contained hidden things which no stranger ought to know.””

(Pages 255, 256)

Hopefully these books were hidden away somewhere. Possibly in an underground vault? At any rate, while destroying any possible written information that would help us in our quest for the truth, the keepers-of-the-secrets still had a big problem. Oral History.

We’ll return to this thought later on in this report.


More Historical Dis-Information

Another false piece of “history” being taught in our controlled school systems today is the is that all of the “wild” Indians of North America, and if fact the peoples of Mexico, Central and South America, arrived here by crossing “a land bridge” which connected Asia with Alaska across the Bering Straight following the last ice age.

The theory being that all the people found in the extended NAFTA area of the globe (as envisioned by our friends over at the Trilateral Commission) migrated across this land bridge.

As Paul Harvey would say, But now, for the rest of the story.

A couple of interesting statements found in the already quoted 1912 scholastic work The Civilization of Ancient Mexico by Lewis Spence:

“The area covered by the ancient Nahuan or Mexican race, both in its fluctuant and settled conditions, extended in its utmost limits from British Columbia in the North to Costa Rica in the south…”

(Page 2).

“But the most important aboriginal population of Mexico was that of the Otomi, who still occupy the plateau of the Guanajuato and Queretaro, and who, after the advent of the Naphua races, probably peopled the entire Mexican plateau. Their language is of the type known as “incorporative” that is, one word embraces several, and appears to have some affinity to the Athapascan Dialect of British North America”

(Page 4)

So far so good. These statements seem to support a migration of the ancient people of Mexico from the north. … Until you read this curious statement further into his report.

“The Totonacs and Chontals were in all likelihood allied to tribes dwelling to the south-east of the Yucatan peninsula who spoke a similar language, and their migration to the lands they occupied was possible effected from South to North by way of the Mexican Gulf.”

(Page 4)

As Vincent H. Gaddis wrote in his book Native American Myths & Mysteries revised (1991):

“Migration by the Bering Sea Strait (or land bridge during glaciation periods when sea levels were lower) has been a theoretical scared cow to many anthropologists, but it does not explain the origin of all native people in America … As for the Bering Straits migrants eventually reaching the far destination of Tierra del Fuego, what has their incentive?

There was no population pressure. About the time Columbus arrived on the scene, it is estimated there were 15 million people living in the Americas, with about one million or less in what is now the United States and Southern Canada. During the last glaciation there was an ice-free area just of the east of the Rocky Mountains and other areas to the south. At worst, ice age man would have had to go no further than modern Mexico.

“Nevertheless, the oldest and most advanced civilizations were in South America. [In fact the further south you go the more elaborate the ruins of these ancient people. [DGC] A vast antiquity here is evident in the ruins under lave flows and at Lake Titicaca. Here the mysteries of countless ages await the study of skilled minds, and Latin American scientists who have led in the research are appalled at their own ignorance. And the trail of the totems is northward.”

(Page 7)

Is it possible that some people migrated from the South to the North? John Baldwin in Ancient America explored just such an unorthodox view.

Mr. Baldwin wrote:

“One of the most learned writers on American antiquities, a Frenchman, speaking of discoveries in Peru, exclaims, “America is to be again discovered! We must remove the veil in which Spanish politics has sought to bury its ancient civilization.”

(Page 13)

“Remains of ancient civilizations, differing to some extent in degrees and character, are found in three great sections of the America continent; the west side of South America, between Chile and the first or second degree of latitude; Central America and Mexico; and the valleys of the Mississippi and the Ohio. These regions have all been explored to some extent … not completely, but sufficiently to show the significance and importance if their archaeological remains, most of which were already mysterious antiquities when the continent was discovered by Columbus.”

(Page 14)

Mr. Baldwin tells us:

“An Ancient and unknown people left remains of settled life, and of a certain degree of civilization, in the valleys of the Mississippi and its tributaries. We have no authentic name for them either as a nation or as a race; therefore they are know as “Mound Builders,” this name having been suggested by an important class of their works.”

(Page 17)

 

America’s Ancient People

According to research by Robert Silverburg as reported by him in his 1978 book on the subject, The Mound Builders, there were tens of thousands of different sized mounds across the eastern half of North America, and,

“each [new American] townsite had its mounds, and generally each town had its antiquarian who studied them before they were swept away by progress.”

(Page 24)

Baldwin’s description of the ancient mounds comes from first hand knowledge. Many were still prevalent around the North American countryside in 1872 when he published his unprecedented historical research book, Ancient America:

“Prominent among the remains by which we know that such people once inhabited that region are artificial mounds constructed with intelligence and great labor. Most of them are usually square or rectangular, but some times hexagonal or octagonal, and the higher mounds appear to have been constructed with winding staircases on the outside leading to their summits”

(Page 10)

Baldwin concludes:

“I find it most reasonable to believe that the mounds found in this part of the continent were used precisely as similar structures were used in Mexico and Central America. The lower mounds, or most of them, must have been constructed as foundations of the more important edifices of the mound-building people. Many of the great buildings erected on such pyramidal foundations, at PalengueUxmal and elsewhere in the region, have not disappeared, because they were built of hewn stone laid in mortar.

For reasons not difficult to understand, the mound builders, beginning their works on the lower Mississippi constructing such edifices of wood or some other perishable material; therefore no trace of them remains. The higher mounds with broad, flat summits, reached by flights of stairs on the outside, are like the Mexican teocallis, or temples. In Mexico and Central America these structures were very numerous.

They are described as solid pyramidal masses of earth, cased with brick and stone, level at the top, and furnished with ascending ranges of steps on the outside. The resemblance is striking, and the most reasonable explanation seems to be that in both regions mounds of this class were intended for the same used.”

(Page 18-19)

Mr. Baldwin continues to provide convincing evidence that the ancient people in North America had common ties with their brothers in the south. One of the most convincing connections is in the design in Adams County Ohio known as The Great Serpent Mound.

 

The Ancient Mound Builders

The Great Serpent Mound

 

Two thousand years ago, nomadic hunter began to honor their dead by heaping earth over their remain. In time, mounds became larger and more complex.

The mound-building culture of the southern Ohio Hopewell people peaked about A.D.150. The Great Serpent Mound is a quarter-mile-long prehistoric earthwork in southern Ohio.

Though there are no know descendants of the tribe who made it, it is believed to have been built with the participation of the entire population and to have been used as a place of worship. For more than one thousand feet, the serpent body with a partly coiled tail extends along the backbone of a ridge, as shown in the engraving above.

At the serpent head is an oval embankment with a heap of stones in the center. An audience could have gathered at this spot to watch or participate in a ceremony.

 

 

Mr. Baldwin explains:

“No symbolic device is more common among the antiquities of Mexico and Central America than is more common among the antiquities of Mexico and Central America than the form of the serpent, and it was sometimes reproduced in part in architectural constructions.

One of the old books giving account of a temple dedicated to Quetzalcohuatl says, “It was circular in form, and the entrance represented the mouth of a serpent, opening in a frightful manner, and extremely terrifying to those who approached it for the first time.”

(Page 28)

I could not have described the Great Serpent Mound of Adams County Ohio any better. What do you think?

Baldwin’s 300-page book presents good hard evidence that not only was there a migration from the north, but that an entirely different group of people came from the south. And he isn’t the only authority that felt that way in the days before the controllers took control over what was to be accepted history and science.

Robert Silverburg tells us of another respected researcher of the time.

[A] “Brilliant analysis of the mounds was produced … by Albert Gallatin (1761-1849), the Swiss-born economist who was Thomas Jefferson’s Secretary of the Treasury. After a long career in public office, Gallatin had become a banker in 1827 and in his later years concerned himself largely with the study of American Indians. In 1836 he published an important work on the Indians, and six years later he founded and became the first president of the American Ethnological Society. His final contribution to his chosen science was a pioneering essay on American languages, published in 1848, when he was 87 years old.

“The large flat-topped mounds of which the Cahokia Mound near East St. Louis, Illinois was then the best known example.” struck Gallatin as having “a strong family likeness to the Mexican pyramids.” The earthen ramparts and embankments of Ohio puzzled him though, for they were unlike any fortifications constructed by existing Indian tribes. This led him to suggest that they were the work of a race different from contemporary Indians, perhaps Influenced by the great civilizations of Mexico.

“ … Gallatin did not think that the mound builders had migrated south to Mexico to create those great civilizations. Instead, he felt that Mexican ideas must have drifted northward and been adopted by the people of the Mississippi valley.”

(Pages 40-41).

As Baldwin tells us in our major reference book for this portion of our research:

“It has sometimes been assumed that the Aztecs came to Mexico from the north, but there is nothing to warrant this assumption, nothing to make it probable, nothing even to explain the fact that some persons have entertained it. People of the ancient Mexico and Central American races are not found further north than New Mexico and Arizona, where they are known as Pueblos or Village Indians.

In the old days there was a frontier region, and the Pueblos seem to represent ancient settlers who went there from the south. In fact, no people really like our wild Indians of North America have ever been found in Mexico, Central America, or South America.

(Pages 217-218).

The findings of these well respected researchers seems to strongly indicate that, as I seem to find time after time in my own research, that we’re not being made privy to the full truth.

 

So far in this research report I’ve presented a magnitude of evidence supporting a migration of some of Americas ancient people from south to north. If this is so, the next obvious question is:

“From where in the south did these people originate?”


The Native American and His-Story

The undisputed truth of history is that in the far southern areas of the Americas, not only were the books destroyed, but also the people were massacred.

But the controllers still had a problem. A big problem. The ruins were too massive to destroy. They stand today as a silent monument to hidden truths. In the north they had no such problem, most of the easily destroyed mounds were plowed under or concreted over. However, as hard as they tried they were not able to wipe out the “savages” and the secrets they knew. This brings us back to the oral history of these true Americans.

The controllers, after failing in the genocide of the red man, next tried to destroy their tight family ties. First by removing them from their traditional lands and placing them on the worst land in the country, then by flooding the reservations with booze. And finally by enticing the young to become part of the “white mans’ system.” This was all done to try and remove the ancient oral knowledge from being passed on from old to young as it had since time began for these people. In far too many cases it’s worked.

But thanks to a few brave historians, much of the tribal knowledge has been preserved. Of course the “establishment” would have us believe that this oral history is nothing more than myths and fables. But one thing doesn’t wash.

I personally find it hard to believe that generations of people worked so hard to preserve fiction … especially people, who historically have proven that they hold such a high regard for the truth.


Descendents of Subterranean Dwellers?

In Legends & Lore of the American Indians (1993) edited by Terri Harden we find:

“ … Several tribes claim to have emerged from the interior of the earth. The Oneidas point to a hill near the falls of Oswego River, N.Y. as their birthplace; the Witchitas rose from the rocks around Red River; the Creeks from a knoll in the valley of Big Black River in the Natchez area, where dwelt the Master of Breath; the Aztecs were one of seven tribes that came out from the seven caverns of Aztlan … and the Navajos believe that they emerged at a place known to them in the Navajo Mountains.”

(Page 299)

On page 152 we find that,

“the Mandan tribes of the Sioux suppose that their nation lived in a subterranean village near a vast lake.”

The Zuni believe that,

“in the old days all men lived in caves in the center of the earth. There were four caves, one over the other. Men first lived in the lowest cave. It was dark. There was no light, and the cave was crowded. All men were full of sorrow.”

(Page 268).

Through several misadventures they finally reached the exterior of the earth.

According to the Pawnee story of creation,

“All living things were under the ground in confusion and asked one another what each was; but one day as the mole was digging around, he broke a hole through, so that the light steamed in, and he drew back frightened. He has never had any eyes since; the light put them out. The mole did not want to come out, but all the others came out on to the earth through the hole the mole had made.”

(Page 123).

Another good source of this ancient knowledge is Native American Legends (1987) compiled and edited by George E. Lankford.

On page 113 he tells us:

“What Chekilli, the head chief of the lower and upper Creeks [Indian tribes] said in a talk held in Savannah [Georgia] in 1735, and which was handed over by the interpreter … word for word, as follows: “At a certain time the earth opened in the west, where it’s mouth is. The earth opened and the Kasihtas [Creeks] came out …””

 

Part II
Secret Underground Tunnels Past & Present
A Closer Look

7-th, 2001 – 01: 2


As I pointed out in the previous report in this series, the origin of at least some of the Ancient Americans of North America lays to the South. We also know of the Ancient tunnels to be found in Mexico and Central and South America. But, do we find evidence of these ancient tunnels in the United States?

In Native American Myths & Mysteries (1991) by Vincent H. Gaddis in chapter IV titled Tunnels of the Titans we find.

“Throughout all the Americas there are legends of archaic avenues, racial memories of subterranean passages stretching for miles. After the great cataclysm the ancestral North Indians lived in the vast cavern complex until it was safe to return to the upper world. The story is spread through many tribes, from the kivas of the Pueblos to the lodges of the Blackfeet, from the campfires of the eastern woodland tribes before their dispersion.

“The Mandans of the northwestern states, some of whom had blue eyes and silky hair … They said the first man to emerge from the tunnels were the Histoppa or the “tattooed ones.” Having left safety too soon, they perished. The rest, who remained below, waited until a bright light dispelled the darkness on the surface…”

“The Apaches’ have a legend that their remote ancestors came from a large island in the eastern sea where there were great buildings and ports for ships. The Fire Dragon arose, and their ancestors had to flee to mountains far away to the south. Later they were forced to take refuge in immense and ancient tunnels through which they wandered for years…”

(Page 39).

As we can see, many of these early Americans knew of these ancient tunnels. Could these tunnels have anything to do with the modern tunnels we have heard so much about in the last few years?

One of the areas rumored to have an underground complex and tunnels and is off limits to most people is the area around White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico.

David Hatcher Childress in his beautifully written Lost Cities of North & Central America (1992) descries the secret headquarters of Apache Chief Victorio.

“Victorio Peak and Hard Scrabble Peak, as well as Geronimo Peak, were all honeycombed with tunnels, caves and secret entrances. The Hard Scrabble entrance led down a flight of steps to an underground river. The last step was booby trapped with a deadly arrow device. It is all like out of some 40s cliffhanger serial”.

(Page 313).

Mr. Childress writes of his talk with Richard Dannelly, a local resident of Sedona, Arizona and author of the book Sedona, Power Spot Vortex. Dannelly told him,

“Some friends of mine had discovered a tunnel that goes underground for quite a distance in the Superstition Mountains.

Yet every time they tried to explore the cave, a strange fear and feeling of dread would overtake the whole party, and they would always turn back.” They were sent to a psychic who told them of a man who would lead them into the tunnel without fear. “With this man as their guide they were able to penetrate further into the tunnel…” Deep inside … “the remains of ancient structures and walls made out of well dressed rock were found. They then discovered at this place a spiral staircase built out of cut stones that down, down, down, down into the earth.

“After some discussion, it was decided that their guide should descent the stairs …

He did so, following the staircase into the deep bowels of the earth. After some tome, he came to a large room with more cut stone. A gigantic rock-cut throne, big enough for a giant, or two people sitting together, was in the middle of the room.

“Artifacts were on the walls, though (he didn’t) know what they were. The man returned up the staircase and reported what he discovered. The others tried to convince him to return to the room and bring some of the artifacts back up, but he refused. The team then left the tunnel, and today the entrance is still a secret.”

(Pages 308-309).

Due to coverage on the nationally long running NBC series Unsolved Mysteries most of us are familiar with the story of Doc Noss and the Lost La Rue MinesDavid Hatcher Childress covers the story in depth in Lost Cities of North and Central America (1986).

He sites a book, “100 Tons of Gold” (1978) by David Chandler. Chandler wrote,

“In 1937 a half-Indian podiatrist named Doc Noss discovered a cache of Apache gold on what is now the White Sands Missile Range … Much of the treasure was in the form of hundreds of stacked gold bars, plus other artifacts, such as swords, goblets, crowns, statues and other things … Doc Noss was shot and killed by his partner Charlie Ryan in March of 1949 … Noss was known to have taken at least 88 bars of gold out of the hidden tunnels inside the mountain.”

(Pages 309-310).

Childress continues this revealing report:

“Because of an article published in the November, 1968 issue of True Treasure magazine there was renewed interest in the fabulous treasure, and a prospector named Harvey Snow was approached by three ranchers who lived in the area west of the Victorio Peak site. Snow had spent 25 years exploring the entire White Sands area, and the ranchers felt that Snow could lead them into the treasure area, bypassing the Army patrols that guarded the missile range.”

Because of a story told Snow many years before by a cowboy who had followed Doc Noss to a hidden tunnel, he believed that the treasure was not at Victorio Peak, but on another peak, Hard Scrabble Peak which was also on government property.

As Mr. Childress tell us:

“Snow’s incredible story is then related by Mr. Chandler; On the second day I found the cave with the sloping steps. I went down the steps; down and down. I don’t know how far. I estimated maybe thirteen hundred or fourteen hundred steps. The bottom step, the last one was rounded at the bottom so that when you stepped on it, it would roll. It was tied to a bow and arrow with rawhide, but the rawhide had rotted a long time ago. I got in there.”

(Page 310)

At the bottom of the steps Snow described a big room with a stream of hot water running through it. Snow followed the tunnel from room to room; sometimes the tunnel would become so narrow that he had to get down on his hands and knees. In one room Snow reported,

“I found some things. I found small stacks … one of gold, one of copper and one of silver.”

”I figured I would come back for that and went on. I next came to a big room. Here there were a bunch of side tunnels running north and south. They were all natural, nothing man made. Here where they intersected, they made a big W. I did not go down these tunnels, I stayed with the stream going west … At the far end of the main room I found some things I cannot tell you about…”

(Page 311).

“Snow’s story is fascinating and virtually unbelievable to most people. He walked 14 miles in an underground tunnel. The 1400 steps or so that he walked down to the subterranean river must have been a good 800 or 900 feet below the entrance. The tunnel was crossed at least in one spot by another tunnel running at a right angle to the one he was following.”

(Pages 113-114).

As we can see from these reports, there exists under the White Sands New Mexico area an extensive system of lengthy tunnels that have been there for ages. It seems to me that if the government wanted underground bases they would make use of these existing tunnels, yet modern researchers never seem to even hint of their existence. Why not?

Mr. Childress made a telling observation concerning government involvement:

“The gold that was at one time stored in Victorio Peak has been seized by the U.S. government, particularly the Army and the CIA.”

And I thought the CIA was concerned with foreign intelligence. Where’s the connection? The Inner Beings perhaps?

“The Army was known to have bulldozed the peak out, and even place a steel door over the entrance to the mountain … The Army assured the state that there was no gold in Victorio Peak and never has been.”

“Never-the-less Chandler shows that a top secret operation took place at White Sands Missile Range on August 10, 1961. On this date the Secret Service, with the help of certain Army personnel at the range recovered the gold, and moved it to various locations for various purposes.”

These claims are backed up by, of all people, Former White House counsel, John Dean in his book Blind Ambition (1976). In it he told of CIA operations dealing with bars of gold.

Egil Krogh had described to me how, when he was bored with his deskwork, he had carried bars of gold bullion through Asia’s ‘Golden Triangle’ in CIA planes and bargained with drug chieftains … The gold bars used in these illegal, clandestine operations allegedly came from the tunnel system inside of Victorio Peak.”

(Pages 314-315).

Besides furnishing our corrupt government with the finances to destroy a generation of Americans with dangerous drugs, the bastards had a large tunnel system in place. It stands to reason that this is one of the systems they are using for their nefarious and black deeds.

When will the American people wake up to the fact that there are a lot of horrible things going on … right below our feet?


The Four Corners

Another popular place for talk of underground activity is the area known as the Four Corners. This is the place where Utah, Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico meet to share a common border. According to intelligence reports from several of my sources there are “at least six underground facilities in this area.” This is also the area where a large number of people died a “mysterious” death a few years back. Are there connections?

This harsh but beautiful arid land is also where the government decided to place several Indian Reservations. However, the Hopi Indians have been in this area as long as they can remember and luckily for us, their history of origin contains important details not found in the memory of other tribes.

The Hopi believe that this world we live in is the Fourth World and the other three are inside the earth. In stages, and through many hardships, they emerged from a hole called Sipapu, entrance to the Hopi underground. Bruce A. Walton (Branton)mtells us in A Guide to the Inner Earth (1983):

“It is a sacred place of pilgrimage for the Hopi, at the bottom of the Canyon of the Little Colorado above it’s junction with the Colorado River.”

(Page 66).

But, unlike most of the emergence stories of the other clans, the Hopi describe the city near from which they came. This city is called Palitkwapi, meaning “legendary Red City of the South.” It is interesting to note that Frank Waters tells us in The Book of the Hopi (1965)

“No one knows where Palatkwapi might have been. Some of our Hopi spokesmen, who are able to read Hopi meanings from symbols and pictographs carved on Mayan stelae and temple walls, believe that the center of the Mayan Old Empire, Palenque, in Chiapas, Mexico was the Hopi legendary city of Palatkwapi.”

(Notes: Page 68).

In support of this theory of Palatkwapi being the same city as Palenque browse through any of the many National geographic magazines containing photos and paintings of the mysterious Mayan ruins and it won’t take you long to realize that the Ancient Mayan cities were predominantly bright red. And if you’ll read Plasma Guns & Sub-riders in THEI Volume 1 #3, you’ll find my research concerning Lord PacalLord Pacal was sent from Valum Chivin (the underworld) to Valum Votan (the upper world) and there he founded the city of Palenque. This we see gives us a direct link of unbroken evidence of a migration of people northward from the Inner Lands.


Summary

Part III
Secret Underground Tunnels Past & Present
Lost Cities & Bottomless Pits

Myths and stories of an “underworld” are the oldest and most persistent memories of man and have passed from culture to culture since recorder time began.

Many describe it as a paradise. Others … a fire filled hell and the home of monsters and devils whose sole aim is to torment, and finally conquer mankind. A good study of this aspect of the hollow earth story isSubterranean Worlds (1989) by Walter Kafton-Minkel. While Mr. Kafton-Minkel leaves no doubt that he is a total skeptic when it comes to the reality of the subterranean worlds, he has written a well documented, easy to read overview of the whole subterranean/hollow world subject from ancient times to the present.

The subtitle of the whole hollow earth subject of his informative book tells it all:

“100,000 years of dragons, dwarfs, the dead, lost races & UFO’s from inside of the earth.”

I recommend it to anyone who would like to read a one-volume history for man’s search for the truth about this intriguing subject. Just keep in mind that this book was written from the establishment viewpoint … however, the author is to be commended for not letting this get in the way of excellent reporting.

Our quest, however, does not lead us in the direction of myths. Hard evidence is what we seek. The research I am currently working on (1990) points toward some exciting possibilities.

Harold T. Wilkins in his 1956 pre-history study Mysteries of Ancient South America presents the case of a civilization centered in Central and South America that existed long before the ancient civilizations of Akkad, Sumer and Egypt. In fact beginning with a “bearded white race of highly civilized people” in the Brazilian Highlands Mr. Wilkins provides the evidence that proves:

“Tropical South America including as it does, the most ancient land in the world never submerged by the ocean, and never ground under the tremendous glaciers of the Ice Ages, may very well have been the cradle of the earth’s civilization, from which it spread outwards to Europe and Africa on the one side and Asia on the other.”

He puts forth the theory, these “bearded white men”, came from Atlantis. However, some of his evidence points in another direction … down into the earth.

In 1939 Mr. Wilkins obtained a transcript of a manuscript written in 1753 by a treasure hunter in Brazil. It tells of the “lust for gold” sending them deeper and deeper into the Brazilian wilderness and the discovery, after much hardship,

of a “great city of ancient date, without inhabitants, that was discovered in the year 1753.”

Here are excerpts of the narration that pertains to our quest:

“We went into the strange city, and we came on a road (street: rua) of great length. And a well set-out plaza (una plaza regular), besides, in it, and in the middle of the plaza a column of black stone of extraordinary grandeur, on whose summit was a statue of a man (homo ordinaria: not a god, or demi-god) with a hand on his left hip and Right arm out-stretched, pointing with the index finger to the north pole…”

(page 43).

“…opposite this plaza there runs very swiftly, a most deep (caudaloso) and wide river, with spacious banks, that were very pleasing to the eye…


“Three days we journeyed down the river, and we stumbled on a cataract (una catadupa) of such roaring noise and commotion of foaming water that we supposed the mouths of the most talked about Nile could not have made more trouble or booming or offered more resistance to our further progress… on the eastern side of this cataract, we found various subterranean hollows (subcavoes) and frightful holes, and made trial of their depths with ropes; but after many attempts we were never able to plum their depths.”

(Pages 44-45).

This story is very similar to the lure that led to the disappearance of Col. Percy Harrison Fawcett, last of the great explorers, along with his son Jack and their companion Raleigh Rimell in the still-unexplored jungles of Brazil in 1925.

Lost Trails, Lost Cities (1953) is a collection of Col. Fawcett’s manuscripts, letters and other records selected and arranged by his son, Brian Fawcett.

Col. Fawcett wrote:

“…the story begins in 1743, when a native of Minas GeradisM, whose name has not been preserved, decided to make a search for the lost mines of Muribeca.”

(Page 5).


[Note the 10 years difference in the two stories].

Just as in the story told by Mr. Wilkins, a group of treasure hunters go through living hell until they come upon a mysterious abandoned city of colossal stone hidden away in the steaming jungle. Col. Faucett tells how the group entered the silent city:

“Huddled together like a flock of frightened sheep, the men proceeded down the street and came to a vast square. Here in the center was a huge column of black stone, and upon it the effigy of a man in perfect preservation, with one hand on his hip and the other pointing north.

(Page 9)

It’s obvious that Col. Fawcett and Mr. Wilkins are reporting on the same city from the same manuscript. However it should be noted that Col. Fawcett in telling of another “lost city” stated:

“It too was distinguished by the remains of a statue of a great black pedestal in the middle of a square.”

(Page 13).

You can’t help but wonder … was this statue also pointing towards the north? As Col. Fawcett continues his narration, his group is also following a river:

“…fifty miles down (river) they came to a mighty waterfall, and in an adjoining cliff face were found distinct signs of mine workings.

(Page 11).

“Investigation proved the suspected mind shafts to be holes they had no means of exploring, but at the mouths lay scattered about a quality of rich silver ore.”

(Page 12).

This information leads one to the conclusion that it’s obvious these “holes”, so deep that the witnesses “were never able to plumb their depths” was not the source of the rich silver oar found “scattered about.” No one would work a mine that you couldn’t even walk into. But, I believe there is a simple, practical explanation.

Historians tell us that even though the Spanish and others plundered many shiploads of gold, silver and other treasures from the peoples of the Americas, the thieves actually got very little compared with what was hidden from the invaders.

On pages 145-155 of Mysteries of Ancient South America Mr. Wilkens writes:

“Where do whispered native Quichua (direct descendents of the Inca Peruvians) traditions say these Lost Inca hoards lie? In sealed caves to which mystic hieroglyphs, whose key is possessed only by one descendent of the Inca at a time in each generation … and in strange underground “subterranean”, thousands of years old which may have been made by a mysterious and highly civilized vanished race of South America in a day when ancient Peruvians themselves, were a mere wandering tribe of barbarians, if not savages, roaming the cordilleras and the high passes…”

Was Col. Faucett and his party on the trail of one of these “subterranean” of the vanished civilization when he disappeared into the unknown? (In a future report we’ll continue with the strange story of Col. Faucett, but for now lets continue with our study of possible subterranean connections).


Trade Routes of the Ancients?

On page 167 Wilkins relates the story from about 1844, when a Catholic priest was called to the deathbed of an old Quichua Indian. The dying man told a story about,

“the closing of the amazing tunnel-labyrinths, by the high priest of the sun temple of old Cuzco, and the magicians, under the eye of the Imperial consort of the late Emperor Atahualpa…

“One of the approaches to the great tunnels lay, and still lies, near old Cuzco, but it is masked beyond discovery. This hidden approach leads directly into an immense “subterranean,” which runs from Cuzco to Lima, as the crow flies, a distance of 389 miles! Then turning southwards, the great tunnel extends into what until about 1868 was modern Bolivia, about 900 miles! [Emphasis by Mr. Wilkins).

He continues to tell of other connecting tunnels like the,

“former Bolivian corridor (today located in Chile) runs southwards, passing through Yarapacca and Cobijo, which are in modern Chile. It must then turn eastwards, passing through or under the cordillera and skirting the mysterious Atacama desert of Northern Chile … The southern end of the tunnel is, thus, lost somewhere in this mysterious salt desert of Atacama…”

(Pages 169-170).

Naturally the establishment “experts” shrugged Mr. Wilkins findings off as “myths and legends.”

Then in his 1972 bestseller, The Gold of the Gods world famous author/adventurer Eric von Daniken tells the story of the “discovery” of a secret entrance to these subterranean passages which proves Mr. Wilkins to be right.

Von Daniken begins:

“To me this is the most incredible, fantastic story of the century. It could easily have come straight from the realms of science fiction if I had not seen and photographed the incredible truth in person … A gigantic system of tunnels, thousands of miles in length and built by unknown constructors at some unknown date, lies hidden deep below the South American continent. Hundreds of miles of underground passages have already been explored and measured in Ecuador and Peru. This is only the beginning, yet the world knows nothing about it.”

(Page 1).

He tells us about the find by Juan Moricz who,

“stumbled on the underground passages in June 1965, during his research work, in which he was ably assisted by Peruvian Indians, who acted as skilled intermediaries between him and their tricky fellow tribesmen. Being cautious by nature and skeptical as befitting a scholar, he kept silent for three years. Not until he had covered many miles of underground passages and found all kinds of remarkable objects” did he tell anyone.

(Page 4)

Juan Moricz escorted Eric von Daniken and Franz Seiner, Mr. von Daniken’s traveling companion, on a trip into the subterranean.

Mr. von Daniken describes the adventure:

“This entrance, cut in the rock and wide as a barn door, is situated in the Province of Morona-Santiago, in the triangle formed by Gualaquiza-San Antonio-Yaupi, a region inhabited by hostile Indians. Suddenly, from one step to another, broad daylight changed to pitch-blackness. Birds fluttered past our heads. We felt the draught they created and shrank back. We switched on our torches and the lamps on our helmets, and there in front of us was the gaping hole which led into the depths. We slid down a rope to the first platform 250 feet below the surface.

From there we made two further descents of 250 feet. Then our visit to the age-old underworld of a strange unknown race really began. The passages all form right angles. Sometimes they were narrow, sometimes wide. The walls are smooth and often seem to be polished. The ceilings are flat and at times look as if they were covered with a kind of glaze. Obviously these passages did not originate from natural causes… they look more like contemporary air-raid shelters!”

(Pages 5-6).

Eric von Daniken continues:

“As I was feeling and examining ceilings and walls I burst out laughing and the sound echoed through the tunnels. Moricz shone his torch in my face:
““ What’s wrong? Have you gone crazy?””
““ I’d like to see the archaeologist with the nerve to tell me this work was done with hand-axes!””
“My doubts about the existence of the underground tunnels vanished as if by magic and I felt tremendously happy. Moricz said that passages like those through which we were going extended for hundreds of miles under the soil of Ecuador and Peru.”

(Pages 5-7).

Now that we have proof that these ancient intelligently constructed tunnels do, in fact, exist we should return to Harold T. Wilkins and one last story from Mysteries of Ancient South America.

“Fuentes, who lived about AD 1689, and wrote an unpublished manuscript history of Guatemala speaks of the amazingly large and ancient towns (inhabited by an unknown and long vanished race) found there by the conquistadors. He said: “

“ The marvelous structure of the tunnels (subterranea) of the Pueblo of Puchuta, being of the most firm and solid of cement, runs and continues through the interior of the land for the prolonged distance of nine leagues to the pueblo of Tecpan, Guatemala…”

“He gave no hint of the uses to which these amazing tunnels, more than thirty miles long, but on the basis of the old Castilian league, were put here by these ancient races of old America.”

(Page 176).

Once again the possibility overlooked is the obvious one. These tunnels are probably ancient trade routes between the under-people and their surface co-Planetarians. They were in use in the ancient times when there was trade and communications between the Old World.

Fuentes continues with what may be the answer to another “mystery.”

“It may be too, that the great tunnel of the Incas had a branch, underground, leading into the forests, eastwards of Cuzco, and in that direction taken by Inca Tupac Amaru, his army, and his host of camp-following refugees, in the late sixteenth century. Maybe, the fleeing Peruvians vanished into these mysterious tunnels, and left only the whispering leaves of the trees of the dense green forests, as mute witness of their secret exits.”

(Page 176).

Fuentes might just be right. As history has shown, the Inca people disappeared with much of their treasure without a trace. Is it possible they, did in fact, seek the safety of the ancient passages and then continued downward into the lands at the center of the earth, never to appear on the surface of the earth again?

Did Col. Faucett and his party, in following the trail of the lost city and “subterranean” ended up tracing the lost Inca civilization into the underworld?

By the use of thugs and murders, after Queen Isabelle and Columbus double-crossed the elitist the “Keepers of the Secret” tried to destroy the true history of the origin of many Native Americans. However, by studying the oral history of these wise people we find that they came from the Inner Lands. Before the controllers got their hands on the truth and completely covered it over it a few American Archaeology books were written which tell the true story of people migrating south to north.

We have traced the Hopi tribe from their emergence near the ancient Mexican town of Palatkwapi/Palenque their present home in the Four Corners. We have looked at many accounts of underground passages in the Four Corners and the White Sands area of New Mexico. Accounts recorded long before today’s researchers started sending out reams of reports proving the government has control of underground facilities in these and other areas of the world, yet not a word on the possible origin of the ancient underground excavations. But, using what we know of these underground passageways, we can safely state that they were probably the trade routes connecting the Inner World with the Outer world.

Now the next question that comes to mind … what is our corrupt government doing in this area between the two worlds? We’ll never know the truth until we quit looking with glazed eyes off into space, and turn our attention to the evidence that is right under our feet.

And on and on, tribe after tribe. Stories of their ancient ancestors emerging from subterranean lands in one way or the other seems to be a common one. Could these separate histories, which all jell into the same fact, be true?

Could some of the ancient Americans actually have come from under the ground we walk on? We’ll pursue this further in my next report.

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