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View Full Version : The Ultimate Proof of Ancient Aliens Found Says Researchers



michaelv
30th March 2014, 20:17
Guys i just came across this..interesting information..

A team of Russian scientists and researchers have just returned from an expedition into Siberia to investigate strange sightings and legends of ancient alien technology in the region. The team has announced that they indeed have found at least five strange metal objects submerged in a swamp like area in the remote regions of Siberia. What is amazing about the discovery of these metal objects is that these locations are where people claim to have seen them in the past but only not submerged. Legends speak of these metal objects being actual alien defense systems for our planet. Anything that could potentially harm or crash into Earth from space would activate these metal cauldrons and then they would destroy or deflect the incoming threat. Some researchers even believe that this defense system could be what caused the Tunguska meteorite to explode over 100 years ago.

http://s3.amazonaws.com/readers/2012/06/22/dfgdfg_1.jpg

You can find out more here (http://scienceray.com/earth-sciences/geology/scientists-prove-ancient-alien-cauldrons-in-siberia-are-real/)

Hervé
30th March 2014, 20:40
Camelot interview of Valery Uvarov in which he describes some of these "things":


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DeDukshyn
30th March 2014, 20:49
Heard about these years and years ago ... why is it that we hear about all these "possibilities' but we never hear anything much further? What can't someone just go get a backhoe and start digging? Surely, if there's the possibility of "alien technology" there, someone will be willing to pay for the excavation? No?

I just get frustrated with hearing the same stories often presented as new over and over again for years with never any follow-up .. grrrr.

My 2 cents and frustration ...

ghostrider
30th March 2014, 20:57
read the contact reports between Edward and Ptaah , and semjase and quetzal , life will make more sense and bye bye your frustration forever ...http://www.futureofmankind.co.uk/Billy_Meier/Contact_Reports

Yetti
30th March 2014, 21:16
This is one of many " ultimate proof" that I know, and what about the hollow spheres found inside rock 400 million yrs old??? who was here then? steel is not natural is a manmade alloy , another is Puma punku in Peru, who made it? what tool they use thousand of years ago? . To deny the existence of far more advanced civilizations Is futile! if anyone remain skeptical, just take a look to a deep space photo of the Hubble telescope, where thousand of GALAXIES are shown, and this is a spot in the night sky not bigger than the tip of a pencil hold with your extended arm over the night sky, so you do the math........

Hervé
30th March 2014, 21:33
Heard about these years and years ago ... why is it that we hear about all these "possibilities' but we never hear anything much further? What can't someone just go get a backhoe and start digging?

[...]

... and that article was published in 2012:

Published by mitchey179 (http://www.triond.com/users/mitchey179)
June 22, 2012, Category: Geology (http://scienceray.com/category/earth-sciences/geology/)

... nothing since.

At least the geologist seems to have brought a useful tool to make that thing ring like a bell: a hammer!

Not sure what the geo/astrophysicist and engineer brought with them?

The Castellan
31st March 2014, 04:58
One slight problem with digging there....everyone who goes there gets really, really sick. I think it's radiation given off by those devices.

Atlas
31st March 2014, 15:06
Legends speak of these metal objects being actual alien defense systems

The alien defense system is a modern ufologist view. The legends do not speak about defense systems:

Local traditions record that lone hunters from the nomadic Evenks and other Yakutians who wander into these weird valleys - there could be more than one - have described odd hemispherical 'iron houses' (kheldyu) that proturude from the perpetually frozen ground. These smooth, reddish formations often have an opening at the top, with a winding stairwell leading down to a circular gallery with numerous 'metal' rooms. Despite temperatures of 40 below outside, the interiors are said to be pleasantly warm. The old Yakutians do not know the origin of these 'houses' or to whom they belong. They vaguely associate them with the ancient demons of the taiga, Niurgun Bootur and Tong Duurai.

These mysterious structures - the locals also refer to them as olguis, or upturned 'cauldrons' - are said to be forged out of an unknown metal, copper-like in colour, incredibly hard and with razor-sharp edges. No one has ever been able to cut off even a fragment. Over time, the Yakutians have noticed that some 'cauldrons' are gradually sinking into the frozen ground and disappearing, leaving behind large circular stains of odd vegetation. These places are dangerous to all living things. Stay too long and your head will spin; you'll be struck by an unknown fatal illness. For this reason, tribal elders long since proscribed such areas, declaring them cursed. The region is called Uliuiu Cherkechekh - the Valley of Death.

Mikhail Korecky from Vladivostok wrote to the newspaper Trud that he’d been to the Valley of Death three times. The first was in 1933, when he was 10 years old; the second in 1937; and finally in 1947 with some friends. He saw a total of seven ‘cauldrons’; all looked mysterious and measured 6–9m in diameter. The vegetation around them was peculiar, more lush than the surrounding plants, with giant burdock leaves, long stalks and weird grass twice as tall as a man. On the last visit, Korecky and his companions spent the night in one ‘cauldron’; although nothing dramatic occurred that night, one friend lost all his hair within a month and Korecky developed two small pustules on his cheek which never healed.

In 1936, a geologist visiting the Olguidakh River (the "place with a cauldron"), found a ‘cauldron’ that was not completely submerged. A smooth hemisphere of metal 2cm thick and with razor-sharp edges, it was reddish in colour. Barely a fifth of it was above ground and the opening in its vault was accessible to a person sitting on a reindeer. The geologist sent its description to the capital city Yakutsk, but no one paid any attention.

A discovery by an old Evenki hunter met with similar lack of interest. In 1971, he claimed to have found an "iron burrow" in the ground in which he saw the bodies of skinny, black, one-eyed beings in "iron costumes". No one believed him, despite his willingness to show them to anyone who was interested. Unfortunately, he has since died.
Not until 1979 did a serious archaeological expedition set out from Yakutsk. Despite the fact that it had a guide - an old settler who had seen the 'cauldrons' in his youth - the expedition failed to locate them. The area where they were said to be had changed dramatically in the intervening years. The vegetation had grown so thick that one couldn’t see more than 10 steps ahead, making discovery a matter of luck.

EDIT: actually there is a legend about a defense system (not the same type though), here it is:

there was an extraordinary concurrence of an earthquake and a thin "fiery whirlwind" topped by a dazzling fireball. With a trail of fire and a "succession of thunderclaps", this sphere flew beyond the horizon where it exploded. The Yakut nomads reasoned that the "demon" must have been a protector as it did them no harm, only destroying the lands of a hostile neighbouring tribe.

A few decades later, the same events recurred, so they called their "demon" Niurgun Bootur, "the fiery champion". Later still, he failed them terribly as a gigantic fireball emerged from the pit over the sunken tower and exploded overhead, affecting the land for 1,000km around.

Quakes shook the ground and cracked the hills, and the centre became a "raging sea of fire" with a disc-like "rotating island" above it. Tribes fled in all directions from the devestation, many of them succumbing to a strange illness that could be inherited.

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"I found some thing!" Pavel yelled to us seconds after landing his parachute. "I saw a strange circle," he said, pointing eastwards of the river. We clustered around the camera and replayed the recording. He was right! In the middle of a monotonous landscape was a strange annulus. With the help of a computer, the taiga image and our Google Earth satellite images, we determined the exact coordinates of the strange circle. Overjoyed at the prospect of finding our first ‘cauldron’, we opened a bottle of vodka.

https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-MJsIAHc_SJ8/TptD7JlPmDI/AAAAAAAAB7A/LpOoACTuoqs/s640/22.jpg

We climbed up a low hill, GPS in hand, through snowy thickets to a clearing at the top and stopped in surprise. We’d never seen anything like this. It wasn’t the long-sought, smooth, protruding hemisphere, but a circular pond about 50m in diameter. At its centre was a circular patch of land approximately 30m in diameter. It didn’t look like a natural formation; it was a ring with an opening at its centre, also flooded with water.

https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-BYahSg67Uas/TpCIGpWNueI/AAAAAAAABrc/YJ9ib3778FY/s640/Foto%2520Jirka%2520Z%25C3%25ADtka%2520218.jpg

Using two long branches to test the earth below him to make sure it wasn’t a treacherous quagmire, Pavel braved the half-frozen water in his fisherman’s waders working towards the snowy annulus. Beneath the snow and a thin layer of mud, a pole hit something solid. Was it just ice? Carefully, he continued to the centre of the circle, halting in front of the opening. The almost 3m-long pole disappeared beneath the surface. What could he have been standing on? If the hemisphere were made of ice, the current would have melted it. Could it be a giant ‘cauldron’, by now almost completely submerged in the frozen earth?

https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-XRHaakoScrg/TpCIh5qrq3I/AAAAAAAABrk/g85T6b5_U_Y/s640/Foto%2520Jirka%2520Z%25C3%25ADtka%2520202.jpg

The snow melted and we were once again fortunate. A few kilometres downriver, we found a similar spot. In a perfectly circular pond, this time only 10m in diameter, was a smooth, solid, gigantic and slightly curved dome, covered in a layer of mud. With the help of a pole, we probed its shape, but unfortunately lacked the equipment to expose it. We would have had to drain the water and remove the mud – and for that we’d need a better equipped and funded expedition.

https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-M7PzctgYWeM/TpCJpKJpmpI/AAAAAAAACQc/neDlSXdGv48/s640/jakutsko%2520359.jpg

Then, unexpectedly, we were hit by odd health problems which manifested after we spent a night near a sunken ‘cauldron’. The next day, I was suddenly overcome by dizziness leading to fainting, a complete loss of balance, choking and chills… just as the old Yakutian legends warned. I couldn’t stand, my vision went and I was unable to eat or drink anything. The crisis lasted all day as our tents were buried by another snowstorm. After more frost and a northerly gale, we were all soaked. It was as if the evil demons of the taiga conspired against us trespassers. But, as I was the only one affected, we didn’t blame it on some ancient radiation residue. When my condition didn’t improve by the following day, we boarded the raft and spent all night and the next day drifting down the river, fleeing the Valley of Death as fast as we could.

https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-r-beRhUUmrA/TpBqf1kB6HI/AAAAAAAABqM/JqksJHdmf2Y/s640/skupina2.jpg

Accounts of our expedition caused quite a stir in the Russian media. It was even said that we were frightened off by the Valley of Death, but the truth is that lack of finance is the real obstacle to returning to hunt for the ‘cauldrons’. We’ve already advised two different exploration teams based in Mirnyj. One of them, led by Andrey Yevteyev, will take along a water pump to drain the central pool and then dig out the rest. The other group, led by Yury Krivoruczko, will probably set out next spring.

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-eMNY2buPt9U/TVRIZfcWOlI/AAAAAAAAASQ/ZEHD8HhF-iU/s320/tunguska_morerecent.jpg

We know of unusual geological formations such as iron caps, gossans, lava balls, giant spherical concretions, and geodes. What if the legend-shrouded ‘cauldrons’ are an unknown geological formation? While the descriptions of interior stairwells, galleries and rooms might have been imagined by superstitious hunters and embellished by fantasists and ufologists, it seems clear that the Siberian taiga conceals great wealth as well as many secrets, including the nature of the ‘cauldrons’ – a disquieting mystery that still remains unsolved.

http://www.digital-kaos.co.uk/forums/f85/yakutia-valley-death-243090/

Atlas
31st March 2014, 17:13
The source you quoted says that the research team was Russian, and its leader's name was Michale Visok. As an ethnic Russian, I say that this first name is simply impossible to have, for a Russian (if anything it would be Mikhail), and the family name is extremely unusual, I've never heard anything like it, never. It just sounds so weird, I find it hard to believe this source just for this reason.

http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread859907/pg7#pid14533136