-
18th January 2017 13:26
Link to Post #1
A Nazi/UFO Base in the Argentine Sea
In 2011 under a pen name I authored a book entitled "The Secret Alliance" still in print with Sharkhunters International of Florida, the leading U-boat website and organization. The evidence I presented set out to prove the cooperation between Argentina and the Third Reich during the Second World War and subsequently.
After completing my postings here in "Parallel Civilizations" regarding the Neuschwabenland map I noted a remark made by Harry Cooper, President of Sharkhunters: "There are two possibilities: either there was a place at Neuschwabenland, or this is a cleverly crafted disinformation by the Germans and the Russians to make people think they went to Antarctica when they actually went to some other place in South American waters - I would love to prove this one way or the other."
The Chilean author Professor Waldemar Verdugo Fuertes wrote an article some years ago about his research into UFO's at Punta Arenas. He spoke with the family Villegas Gómez who lived there in the 1940's and with several fishing families. Gómez told Professor Fuertes that at the war's end many Aryans arrived in southern Chile and were given lodgings locally. Hundreds of German families came down. From the island of Madre de Dios near the icefield they were apparently collected by U-boat. German U-boats were common in the area in the Hitler period. Gómez thought that the destination was Antarctica and added that the first UFO's did not begin to be a common sight over the Punta Arenas region until 1946-1947.
In my opinion it would not have been possible to convey all these hundreds of German families through the sub-glacial tunnels below Neuschwabenland in voyages lasting up to a fortnight in midget U-boats able to carry two passengers: and with a Soviet base standing by watching it all.
For that reason I look back at my earlier research and find that as before I suspect what are called Inconstant Islands as the Nazi/UFO base or bases.
An Inconstant Island is an island or group of islands discovered by some naval expedition centuries earler, claimed by that country, visited and mapped which then vanished inexplicably only to reappear at the same coordinates at some much later time.
There are two such island groups in the South Atlantic.
(1) The three Aurora islands, now absent from charts for well over a century, lie halfway between the Falklands and South Georgia island. They were discovered in 1763 by the Spanish barque Aurora, and their presence confirmed in 1795 by the Spanish Navy's Malaspina Expedition. They were seen quite frequently between then and 1870 when they disappeared once more never to return.
(2) The inconstant Sanson Islands close to the Argentine coast have always interested me for reasons which I shall explain in my next posting.
-
The Following 34 Users Say Thank You to Mecklenburger For This Post:
AndrejPeĉënkin (18th January 2017), Baby Steps (19th January 2017), Bill Ryan (19th January 2017), BMJ (18th January 2017), Bruno (18th January 2017), ceetee9 (19th January 2017), Chrononaut (23rd January 2017), Debra (19th January 2017), Ecnal61 (21st January 2017), Fellow Aspirant (19th January 2017), Foxie Loxie (18th January 2017), gaiagirl (21st January 2017), Gillian (20th January 2017), Iloveyou (18th January 2017), jjjones (19th January 2017), Joe (18th January 2017), justntime2learn (18th January 2017), mab777 (21st January 2017), Mercedes (18th January 2017), mountain_jim (22nd January 2017), Nasu (18th January 2017), Noelle (20th January 2017), Olaf (19th January 2017), Oxygen (20th January 2017), seko (19th January 2017), Sequoia (19th January 2017), shaberon (21st January 2017), Shannon (18th January 2017), sheme (18th January 2017), sijohn (19th January 2017), StandingWave (21st January 2017), Sunny-side-up (18th January 2017), sunwings (18th January 2017), Zampano (19th January 2017)
-
18th January 2017 21:13
Link to Post #2