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So What's really out there?

There are literally untold billions of dollars waiting to be discovered. Will you be the one, if not it'll probably be me. The world is full of True Adventures, plenty to last a hundred lifetimes I guarantee you that. Although my passion is Treasure Hunting http://www.stangrist.com/?hop=theminer I've had many wonderful experiences mining gold both professionally and as a hobby. I started reading about gold mining and treasure hunting when I was young,and and in my early 20's I met Mr. Louis Matacia http://www.americaninsurancedepot.com/help/dowsing.htm a professional dowser and Treasure Hunter. I was thrown into the world of Treasure Hunting in New Mexico, and Texas and had many adventures and some great success. Alot of the early knowledge I've attained and success I attribute to Mr. Matacia, he is a man I respect a great deal.  I didn't really start mining until I moved to California, I  bought a mining claim in the heart of the California gold country with a couple partners and went to work dredging the river for gold. We had to have our equipment helicoptered in, it was about a mile hike down the canyon to a place I can only describe as paradise. We were dredging ancient river gold that had washed down from up above, we did very, very well. Since then I,ve dredged the American River, the Kern River, the San Gabrial River and the Colorado River, all with success. Yes folks there is still tons of gold to be had.  Although I love dredging for gold there are other ways of mining such as sniping that can produce the same if not better results, you clean exposed bedrock cracks for trapped gold basically, bedrock is the crust of the earth and all the heavy stuff gets trapped or ends up there. I set out to do some mining on the San Gabrial River in Southern California, I planned to take a few days with a couple friends and do some sniping for gold. We were about a hundred yards down the trail and I noticed a couple guys putting together their new six inch Keene dredge http://www.keeneeng.com/ . I complemented them on a nice looking dredge and they wished us good luck as we headed down the trail. A couple days went by and we decided to hike out. It was getting a little late when we got to the camp of the dredgers and they invited us to stay for some barbacue and a beer, miners are some of the nicest folks you'll ever meet. They had just finished cleaning up there gold for the day, and as he showed me a 1/2 ounce of some pretty gold flakes and tiny nuggets, I dumped over 2 1/2 ounces of gold into my little cleanup pan. They peered into the pan, and couldn't believe there eyes. I had several nice size nuggets ranging from  2 pennyweight to allmost a quarter ounce. They couldn't believe how a couple of guys with a small sluice box and minimal gear could come back with that much gold. I said look guys you've dredged five to eight feet deep to bedrock where the gold is. Well down the river  we're sniping exposed bedrock and cleaning the bedrock cracks for the gold that's been left behind and trapped, we have more exposed area to work 100 times the area. Well about a week or so later one of the guys called me and said "Frank I would love to learn how to snipe for gold can you teach us?" Well needless to say about six months later they sold there dredge, and are now sniping gold all over and really paying for there trips. Gold sniping can really pay and it doesn't take alot of heavy equipment, just a wetsuit mask and snorkel and some basic crevicing tools which you can make yourself. With good research there are plenty of places that still have lots of gold to be sniped, and most good sniping areas will replinish themselves. A good metal detector really helps in locating good cracks to crevice http://www.kellycodetectors.com/indexmain.htm Also in sniping you see the gold as your mining it which allways gives me a thrill. But don't let me discourage you from buying a dredge, a small 2 inch model is great for sucking out bedrock cracks.  You may need a larger dredge if your in an area that's really paying it depends on the situation one of my idols Dave McCracken  http://www.goldgold.com/ Dave can show you what It's all about, he has some of the best books and videos on goldmining and dredging. I consider him one of the fathers of underwater gold mining. Check out these sites to learn more on sniping  for gold : http://store.goldfeverprospecting.com/crsnforgo.html , http://www.lifestylestore.com/ls , Hey send an e-mail and I'll take you mining myself  www.crazygoldhunter007@yahoo.com I really like seeing people getting involved in mining It's a dying art, and finding some gold is not bad either. See you out there soon.

Yours Truly,

Frank Salmon                                                                        

Treasure Hunting

Where do I begin, there are so many areas in Treasure Hunting. It really depends on you, and what type of interest you have. You might just want to metal detect beaches and parks, or collect artifacts and relics from ghost towns or historic places. There's also Cache hunting which is searching for buried treasures basically. A cache could be a number of things, could be a train robbers loot, maybe a rancher buried his savings under one of his fencepost, which is called a posthole bank. People buried money precious metals, and just about any item you can imagine for many reasons. Why would you bury something ? To hide it from everyone else ofcourse. It takes alot of  hard work and research to pinpoint that lost mine, or that forgotten ghost town or beach.  If you look out over any beach, 3 to 4 feet down is a literal treasure trove of coins and jewelry which are heavier and sink below the sand. I've left beaches with a five gallon bucket half filled with coins and jewelry. On one day after about just two hours work, I found a 24 inch Italian gold necklace two diamond rings, several silver rings, and a bunch of coins, one of which was an 1889 walking liberty half dollar"no bull", that was in Golden Gate Park in San Fransisco. I used a Garrett metal detector that cost me about $250. I paid for it in about 2 hours. But anywhere where people have been or history has taken place there is treasure to be found. It maybe a rare coin or a hoard of Spanish gold bars your looking for it depends on your research. Although most legends are based on some kind of fact I myself only deal with the facts not fantasy. My own interest lie in the Conquistador period and the search for Lost Cities and Ancient Cultures http://www.stangrist.com/?hop=theminer ,  http://www.mysteries-megasite.com/main/bigsearch/lostcities.html,  but love and enjoy all forms of Treasure Hunting and Mining. I tend to take things to the extreme when seeking Adventure, right now I'm preparing for a trip to South America. A while back I discovered a series of satellite photos taken in 1974 by the Landsat II Satellite which showed 12 pyarmids and other structures that to my knowledge have not been recorded or discovered by anyone. I plan to lead a group of Archaeologist and a well trained group of individuals to explore this forgotten city. It is believed by many that in South America there are remnants of an advanced civilization, possible the people of Atlantis. A man named Percy Fawcett http://home.earthlink.net/~larryorcutt/fawcett.html , lead several expeditions into the Interior of the Amazon jungle in the early part of the 20th Century. He discovered an ancient lost city in the heart of the Amazon's Matto Grasso region. A book was later written by his son from his fathers manuscripts, and what was told can only be described as amazing. But still proper research must be accomplished if I or anyone else is going to recover a lost treasure or lost city. Most of you out there have no idea that  fortunes really await them. In the US back in the 1930's the US government put a ban on private ownership of gold bullion, as a result thousands upon thousands of gold mines shut down overnight, the gold price dropped so low it just wasn't worth mining it. Well those laws weren't repeald until Kennedy came into office. And the guys that mined those thousands of gold mines have been dead more than sixty years,  there not around to tell us where to go. So now we have to read about these places, where to go, and what's there. But don't worry there's plenty of gold and treasure left to find. Just in California since the Conquistadors started mining until today only 3 or 4% of the gold has been taken from the ground and thats just in California. Most of it is lost and covered over, not found yet, or too deep to find, it is definately there though. Just by understanding a small piece of history and what took place in our past can we begin to understand what awaits us. Once you start reading about lost treasures its hard to stop, the possibilities are endless of what can be discovered. And we have it a little easier than the oldtimers did back then, the technology we have now is truly amazing, there are metal detectors of every type and price range. You can even go to Radio Shack and buy a Bounty Hunter metal detector for around $200. bucks. I use a Minelab Detector for Gold Mining and another Minelab that uses a pulse induction technology for the beach, they'll run you about 2 to $3000. depending on the model. I'm also working with some advanced technology that can see underground in 3D immagery. I'll be able to go anywhere in the world and see underground for over a hundred feet http://www.imaginglocators.com/ , remember what I talked about understanding just a small piece of history. Metal detecting is an awesome hobby, it get's you outdoors and lets you profit from mother nature. It doesn't cost much to start, a couple hundred bucks for a good detector, some gas and food, a little research and who knows. Obey the laws this I cannot stress enough  . To me its about living the True Adventure more than what we dig up or how we profit. If you get into treasure hunting just for the money your in the wrong business and your not going to have very much fun. Don't get me wrong there is alot of money to be had in mining and treasure hunting, but the experiences I've had I would not trade for any amount of money. Now if your interested in making a business out of mining or treasure hunting there are a number of ways you can profit. But its hard for most of us to drop everything and go hunt treasure professionally. If you are financially independant, have investors, or lots of cash laying around thats different as long as the bills are paid. I do suggest starting a business first that can either pay you a residual income or enough money that you can afford to take the time to hunt. Remember Research is 95% of all treasure hunting, and until your puzzle is put together don't drop everything and run out digging blind holes. I've made the mistake of doing that and ended up homeless, so be carefull do your research and prepare yourself for what lays ahead. Remember life is a True Adventure and is also a very precious and wonderful thing, cherish the time you have on this Earth and love the ones your with. If any of you are interested in learning how to start your own business I've provided some links to some of the top businesses on the Net, maybe you'll get some good ideas, let me know www.crazygoldhunter007@yahoo.com I am currently looking for investors for several projects in Southern Ca., New Mexico, And South America. Small investment BIG payout send me an e-mail and I will amaze you. Until then good fortune to all of you.

Yours Truly,  

Frank Salmon, Treasure Hunter, Adventurer   

 

                                                                

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Ancient Tunnel Systems

Finally, the fantastic and mysterious book, "The Chronicle of Akakor" by (the late) Karl Brugger, is available for purchase! This extremely rare, non-fiction, out-of-print book, about the origin of mankind and mysterious subterranean tunnel system below South America is available for immediate download in Adobe Acrobat pdf format. Please click here to purchase. Chapter 4, "The Wisdom of the Ugha Mongulala" is now available in our library for you to read free of charge. This is one of the most amazing books I have ever seen! We hope you enjoy it.

 

 

 

 

 

The Mystery of South America's 

Subterranean Tunnels

by Warren Smith

Ancient South American tunnel entrance in Ecuador visited by Stan Grist in 1997

 

Strange tunnels that run for hundreds of miles beneath South America...

An immense treasure hidden in subterranean vaults...

Underground gardens artistically crafted from gold and precious jewels...

Rumors of golden plaques with strange inscriptions engraved on their shining sides...

These are the ingredients of the great mystery connected to a network of subterranean tunnels allegedly existing beneath the valleys and plateaus of South America. Enigmatic stories about these mysterious tunnels sound like something out of Arabian nights. The riddle goes back to the days of the Spanish conquest. Old chroniclers and cleric writers reported on tunnels and subterranean passages beneath many of the old cities and ancient ruins.

Recently, Erick von Daniken reported that he'd had been in a network of tunnels that run for thousands of miles beneath the South American continent. Von Daniken said in the Gold of the Gods that he had been in the tunnels, accompanied by their discoverer, Juan Moricz, a Hungarian immigrant who is now a citizen of Argentina. Entrance to the subterranean labyrinth is somewhere in the province of Morona-Santiago, Ecuador. According to von Daniken, he saw immense rooms filled with metallic plaques. They constitute a possible record of the ancient world, according to the Swiss writer.

The first knowledge about these immense underground tunnels came when the Conquistadores invaded ancient South America. The ex-swineherd, Don Francisco Pizzaro, kidnapped the emperor of the Incas and held him for ransom. Don Francisco drew a red line around the prisoner's room, nine feet above the floor of the seventeen by twenty-foot room. The Inca stated he would fill the room with gold in return for his freedom. From his cell in Caxamarco, emperor Atahualapa ordered his subjects to gather up gold for his ransom.

Before the emperor could be freed, he was killed by Pizzaro's soldiers. Learning of the assassination, the Incas hid their gold. Thousands of llamas loaded with treasure were diverted away from Caxamarco. It is believed by some treasure hunters that the llama loads of gold were hidden in these ancient tunnels. Indian legends say the gold was secreted "in such a place that even we do not know the location."

Among the artifacts that vanished were the mummified bodies of thirteen Inca emperors. They had sat on golden chairs in the Temple of the Sun at Cuzco, the chairs resting on a huge slab of gold. Realizing the Spaniards were interested only in riches, the Indians hastened to hide their sacred objects. Polo de Ondegardo, another of the king's Conquistadores, stumbled across three mummies of the ancient kings' twenty-six years later. The mummies were stripped of their jewelry; the bodies were broken into pieces.

The remainder of the mummies have not been found. They are believed to have been hidden in the tunnels beneath Cuzco and the fortress of Sacsahuaman. The old chroniclers say the tunnels were connected with the Ccoricancha, a name given to the sacred area of old Cuzco. In addition to the Temple of the Sun, this area contained temples dedicated to the moon, lightening, thunder, Venus, the rainbow and the Pleiades. The area was considered to be sacred to the Incas because of the riches in this "enclosure of gold." Around the Temple of the Sun was a yard-wide strip of gold embedded into the stone. The temple contained an immense sun disc cast from pure gold. The golden disc was attached to the altar wall of the temple in such a way that the morning sun reflected against the great orb. On each side of the large disc were two smaller plates. Finally, another large sun disc was situated in the temple so that it reflected back the rays of the setting sun.

The mummified remains of Inca rulers were placed around the temple decorated with golden jewelry and precious stones. Near the mummies were large gold plates engraved with a picture of the Inca as they appeared during life. These were the treasures that eluded the rapacious Spaniards.

The Garden of the Sun was another fantastic hoard that has been lost. Sarmiento (1532-1589) reported this subterranean garden was located near the Temple of the Sun. "They had a garden in which the lumps of earth were pieces of fine gold," he reported. "These were cleverly sown with maize - the stalks, leaves and ears of which were all pure gold. They were so well planted that nothing would disturb them. Besides all this, they had more than twenty sheep with their young. The shepherds who guarded the sheep were armed with slings and staves made of gold and silver. Pots, vases and every kind of vessel were cast from fine gold."

The important buildings in the Ccoriancha were connected by underground tunnels with the fortress of Sascahuaman. Entrances to these tunnels started at the Chincana, "the place where one gets lost." As we mention in another chapter of this book, all of the entrances have been sealed. Too many adventurous treasure hunters were going in to the caverns and disappearing.

After they conquered Peru, the Spaniards destroyed the temples in Cuzco and the church of Santo Domingo was erected on the site. There is an old legend in Cuzco that a treasure hunter slipped into the tunnels. In his search for riches, the man became lost and wandered through the maze of tunnels for several days. One morning, about a week after the adventurer had vanished, a priest was conducting mass in the church of Santo Domingo.

The priest and his congregation were suddenly astonished to hear sharp rapping on the stone floor of the church. Several worshippers crossed themselves and murmured about the devil's demons. The priest quieted his congregation and directed that a large stone slab be removed form the ancient floor. The group was astonished to see the treasure hunter come up out of the tunnels carrying a gold bar in each hand.

Dr. A.M. Renwick, dean of the Anglo-Peruvian College in Lima, tells of another temple with immense subterranean passages. Writing in Wanderings in the Peruvian Andes, Dr Renwick told his readers of visiting the ancient temple of Chavin in the isolated regions of the Andean mountains. The temple covers some 30,000 square yards and is fortified. The ruins are situated across a valley from a stone fortress. Dr. Renwick believed underground tunnels connected these two structures.

The temple of Chavi is pyramidal in shape, consisting of four stories. The uppermost parts of the structure have been destroyed. Renwick reported that after considerable effort, his expedition located the entrance to the ancient tunnels. While the entrance was quite narrow, the tunnels themselves were large and "commodious."

"These subterranean corridors are in almost perfect condition," Dr. Renwick explained. "The masonry is for the most part, as solid as if built only a few years ago, and the passages are so extensive that we were able to spend the whole day exploring the recesses of this building which must have been reared three thousand years ago. No such walls are built in that region today. The whole is liberally supplied with air. In a place where four corridors meet stands the famous idol of Chavin, a granite obelisk thirteen and a half feet in height with a diameter of over two feet at its widest. It represents a fanged monster, partly jaguar and partly human. Here for at least three thousand years must have stood this idol.

The figure is most carefully engraved in high relief and is adorned with serpents and other symbolic figures."

Dr. Renwick said that other commitments prevented a complete investigation of these subterranean passages. He felt a survey of the tunnels would require at least two years.

Rumors of these massive tunnels were so persistent during the 1850's that a viceroy of Peru decided to find the entrance. An expedition was outfitted and sent to find an entrance into the subterranean passages. They were guided by a roughly sketched Inca map that had been obtained from an unknown source by a Jesuit missionary. The map led the gold hunters into the rugged terrain of the Huatanay region of Peru. This was the area where the last of the Incas resisted the Spanish invaders for almost a hundred years. The Spaniards were under fire by savage Indians. They lost their supplies during a battle in which huge boulders were sent crashing down from high mountains by the outraged Indians. Disgusted with the savagery of the country and the hostility of the Indians, the group gave up their quest and returned to Lima.

Several of the early priests in South America reported hearing deathbed confessions from converted Inca Christians. Father Pedro del Sancho in a Relacion told of a dying Quichua Indian who claimed to have been a witness to the ceremonial closing of the tunnels. Father del Sancho wrote:

"...My informant was a subject of the Inca emperor. He was held in high esteem by those in power at Cuzco. He had been a chieftain of his tribe and made a yearly pilgrimage to Cuzco to worship his idolistic gods. It was a custom of the Incas to conquer a tribe or nation and take their idols to Cuzco. Those who wished to worship their ancient idols were forced to travel to the Inca capital. They brought gifts to their heathen idols. They were also expected to pay homage to the Inca emperor during these journeys".

"As he lay dying, the man told me that he was revealing that which no other white man had ever been told. When it became apparent that the empire was falling to the "white devils" from across the sea, the high priest of the Temple of the Sun called a meeting. The men who came together were the highest priests of the land. They met with the sorcerers and magicians from Cuzco and other outlying towns. Also in attendance were other noble consorts from the court of Atahualapa, the last emperor.

"It had reached the ears of these men that my countrymen were interested in gold and silver. Their hatred for the emissaries of his majesty, the king, was beyond description. They agreed at this meeting to spirit away as much of their riches as could be handled. These treasures were placed in ancient tunnels that were in the land when the Incas arrived.

"Also Placed in these subterranean repositories were artifacts and statues deemed sacred to the Incas. When the hoard had been placed in the tunnels, there was a ceremony conducted by the high priest. Following these rites, the entrance to the tunnel was sealed. The opening was concealed in such a manner that one could walk within a few feet and never be aware of the entrance.

"My informant said that the entrance lay in his land, the territory which he ruled. It was under his direction and with his subjects that the openings were sealed. All who were in attendance were sworn to silence under the penalty of death. Although I requested more information on the exact location of the entrance, my informant refused to divulge more than what has been written down here."

The Russian-born mystic and occultist, Madame Helene H.P. Blavatsky, was travelling in Peru in 1848 when she heard rumors of these ancient tunnels. The founder of Theosophy, Madame Blavatsky was always interested in unusual events. After leaving Lima, where she heard about the tunnels, Madame Blavatsky went on to Arica on the frontier between Chile and Peru. She questioned everyone she met about the tunnels. Her report reads:

"We reached Arica, near sunset, and at a certain point on the lonely coast we were struck by the appearance of an enormous rock, nearly perpendicular, which stood in mournful solitude on that shore, and apart from the cordillera of the Andes. As the last rays of the sun strike the face of the rock, one can make out, with an ordinary opera glass, curious hieroglyphics inscribed on the volcanic surface.

"When Cuzco was the capital of old Peru, it contained the Temple of the Sun, famed far and near for its magnificence. It was roofed with thick plates of gold and its walls were covered with the same precious metal. The eaves troughs, carrying off the rainwater, were also made of pure gold. In the west wall, the architects had contrived an aperture, in such a way that, when the sunbeams reached it, it caught and focused them inside the temple's nave and sanctuary. Stretching inside the temple like a golden chain from one sparkling point to another, the rays encircled the walls, illuminating the grim idols, and disclosing certain mystic signs that were at other times invisible."

By interpreting these mystic signs, according to Madame Blavatsky, the location of the tunnels, their entrance and how they might be entered could be discerned. She reported these signs were invisible except on certain days when the sun's rays were focused directly on the inscriptions.

Madame Blavatsky reported the tunnels started at Cuzco and ran underground to Lima, a distance of around 380 miles by air. At Lima the tunnels turn southward into what is now modern Bolivia. This is a distance of some thousand miles! She also reported that within the tunnels is a point where a royal tomb has been constructed. The ancient tomb has been protected by a couple of enormous slabs of stone that form a door. The huge stone door is constructed in such a way that no cracks or joints can be seen. Only by reading certain signs can the secret location of the royal tomb be ascertained.

Exactly where she obtained her information was not mentioned by Madame Blavatsky, However, she mentioned a secret society of custodians who protect the tunnels. This secret society is believed by many investigators to exist today, carefully guarding the treasures of the ancients. However entrance could be obtained to the subterranean labyrinth provided the seeker can interpret symbols carved on rocks and visible only when the sun hits the stone at a certain angle.

Even if an adventurous person were to find the entrance, the tunnels would be extremely dangerous to explore. If the Inca's tomb is flanked by huge stone doors that pivot, there must be a method gaining entrance. The doors may be operated by a hidden mechanism. They might open when a certain word is spoken, reminiscent of the "open sesame" of the Arabian nights.

We can assume that the ancient builders of the tunnels anticipated possible grave robbers. They probably created a deadly trap for unwary ghouls. Madame Blavatsky was told during her South American trip that a thousand soldiers couldn't penetrate into the treasure-laden tomb. Her informant said:

"... A thousand soldiers, were they in the tunnel, would be forevermore one with the dead, did they attempt to force their way into the treasure tomb of the dead Inca. There is no other access to the Arica chamber, but through the hidden door in the mountains near the Rio Payquina. Along the entire length of the main corridor, from Bolivia to Lima and royal Cuzco, are smaller hiding places filled with treasures of gold and gems and jewels, that are the accumulation of many generations of Incas. The aggregate value of the treasures is beyond the power of man to estimate."

Nearly a hundred years ago, Madame Blavatsky claimed to have an accurate map of the tunnels. "We had in our possession an accurate map of the tunnels, the sepulcher, the great treasure chamber and the hidden, pivoted rock doors," she stated. "It was given to us by an old Peruvian; but if we had ever thought of profiting from the secret it would have required the co-operation of the Peruvian and Bolivian governments on an extensive scale. To say nothing of physical obstacles, no one individual or small party could undertake such an exploration without encountering an army of brigands and smugglers with which the coast is infested, and which, in fact, includes nearly the entire population. The mere task of purifying the mephitic air of the tunnel not entered for centuries would also be a serious one. There the treasure lies, and tradition says it will lie until the last vestige of the Spanish rule disappears from the whole of North and South America."

When Christopher Columbus landed on the island of Martinique, a story of similar tunnels was brought to his attention. The Carib Indians told the Spanish about the Amazon women who lived without men. Columbus and his crew were informed that these women would hide in ancient subterranean tunnels if they were bothered by men. If their persistent suitors followed them into the tunnels, the Amazons cooled their passions with a flurry of arrows from their strong bows.

The concept of vast underground passages is enough to boggle the mind. That such tunnels could be constructed indicates a science in pre-Inca or Inca days. It means there was a technology capable of building a labyrinth beneath the earth.

And for what purpose? It is one thing to construct an underground shelter in the event of a catastrophe. Such a cavern, man-made or naturally formed, would provide safe refuge against an impending disaster. To construct tunnels that run for a hundred or a thousand miles beneath the South American continent is beyond the boundaries of present knowledge.

But many people persist in hunting for the caverns. I have corresponded with and met several people who search for the tunnel entrance. Some are wild-eyed visionaries with a fanatical gleam in their eyes. A few are mentally disturbed individuals. Others are quick-buck opportunists out to fleece anyone who will put up funds for the funds for an expedition.

A sampling of the correspondence includes this letter from a Brazilian physician who spends his vacation time hunting for the tunnels. He writes:

"... English Explorer, Colonel Fawcett, disappeared in the jungles several years ago. He was searching for a tunnel entrance into the subterranean world in the Rancador mountains when he vanished. Reports from that part of Brazil indicate that Fawcett and his son, Jack and their companion were living in a cavern city beneath the mountains. They were well treated, according to these reports, but they were not allowed to return to the surface because they might reveal the location of the entrance.

"The entrance to the cavern city is carefully guarded by the Murcego Indians. They are a ferocious, dark-skinned tribe with a highly developed sense of smell. You must obtain their approval before you enter the caverns. However, should they decide you are not worthy to share the secret, you will not be allowed to return to civilization.

"There is a legend in Brazil that the subterranean cities were constructed by the survivors of Atlantis. We don't know if the present inhabitants are the descendants of the Atlanteans, or whether they died and another race wandered into the tunnels and settled in the city."

Don Francisco Pizarro found tunnel entrances that had been closed with gigantic slabs of stone during the campaign against the Incas. Pizarro located these entrances at a height of 22,000 feet on Huascaran, the sacred mountain of the Incas. History doesn't tell if he succeeded in entering the cavern or what he found there.

These caves were forgotten until 1971 when a group of South American spelunkers organized an expedition to explore the caverns. They arrived at the Peruvian village of Otuzco. The group was equipped with winches, miners lamps, ropes, cables, and battery-powered flashlights. Two hundred feet below the surface, the group found their progress blocked by several huge slabs of stone. It took the efforts of four men to push these doors open, pivoting the slabs on stone balls that acted as guides.

A report on what they discovered indicates history may need to be revised. A Peruvian periodical said:

"The tunnels found behind the stone slab doors would test the ingenuity of today's largest and best equipped contractors. These tunnels lead toward the seacoast angling away at a slope of 14 degrees. The floor of the tunnel is made from stone slabs. These stones have been mortised and grooved to fit together. They have been marked in such a manner that they are slip-proof.

"The tunnels extend for an estimated sixty miles and end some eighty feet below sea level where they are flooded with seawater. It is believed that the tunnel may have run beyond the coast, under the ocean, and onto an island off the coast. To date, the speleologists have not ventured beyond the spot where the tunnels are flooded."

"Scholars point out that the skills needed to construct these tunnels was beyond the knowledge of the natives of ancient Peru. Exactly who built the tunnel and why, remains a mystery."

Perhaps the mystery of the tunnels will be solved someday in the future. Until then, we might consider that these structures were probably in South America prior to the reign of the Incas. Some scholars have suggested that the tunnels were built by the Atlaneans. Others have speculated that an unknown race that existed before the flood constructed the tunnels. Still others debate the possibility that the tunnels were made by the unknown builders of Tiahuanaco and other megalithic stoneworks. It is rumored, but not proven, that subterranean tunnels can be found under the ruins of Tiahuanaco, that the passages spread out from those ruins to other points on the continent.

Peter Cristobal de Molina, a Spanish chronicler in the 15th century, tried to penetrate the mystery of the Inca tunnels. In Ritos y Fabulos de los Incan, Molina reported a South American legend about the creator of mankind leaving the surface and going into an underground paradise. The father of humanity did this after his work was complete. This secret retreat for the "God" or "gods" of old South America was the origin of many culture bearers and teachers who pop up periodically throughout history.

 

To learn more about the Mysteries of the Ancient Tunnels, the Cueva de los Tayos, Juan Moricz, the Metallic Library and Much More click here.

 

 

Want To Find Gold? Get Stan's report "My Secrets to Finding Millions of Ounces of Alluvial Gold" FREE when you subscribe to his FREE 7 part email Placer Gold Prospecting Course.  Stan reveals all of the secrets he developed and used to find millions of ounces of commercial placer gold deposits in numerous locations. We will also send you special updates on our newest e-books. We respect your privacy, your name and email address will never be sold or given to anyone. Send and email to : subscribe@stangrist.com

 

 
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