The Chronicle of Akakor, gives the history, as
given to the author by one of their chiefs-- of the Ugha Mongulala tribesman,
whose ancestors were allegedly part of a vast empire which covered South America
in ancient times. Some of these ancient people, the chief claimed, left the
planet in aerial vessels to explore other parts of the solar system and beyond,
leaving behind vast subterranean cities beneath the Andes mountains and western
Brazil. In 1971, due to the constant encroachment of white settlers or invaders
into their territory, 30,000 survivors of the Ugha Mongulala allegedly escaped
to this ancient system of underground cities, consisting of 13 separate
subterranean complexes all connected by tunnels, one of which is said to extend
to Lima, and others of which are located throughout the Andes Mountain range of
Peru.
http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Subterranean-Express-Inner-Earth/377858655616927
Akakor is the name of a supposed ancient
underground city, located somewhere between Brazil, Bolivia and
Peru.
It was described by German journalist Karl
Brugger, based on interviews with a self-proclaimed Brazilian Indian chieftain
Tatunca Nara in his book The Chronicle of Akakor (1976). Although Brugger was
apparently convinced, the information in it has only one source (Tatunca Nara),
who was later exposed by activist and adventurer Rüdiger Nehberg as being
Günther Hauck, a German.
Elements of the story from The Chronicle of Akakor
were used in the film Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, where
they were conflated with El Dorado, although references are to
"Akator".
http://www.ask.com/wiki/Akakor
The Chronicle of Akakor
http://www.stangrist.com/Akakor.pdf
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]