Venezuelan Governments’ Inexplicable Silence in Relation to
Inner Earth Accounts
Monday, 18 February 2013 09:38 | Posted
by Agus Judistira (Manager) | | |
Laura: Article found on http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Subterranean-Express-Inner-Earth/377858655616927
The
book ”Mysteries of the Andes”, by Robert Charroux, contains an unusual story
about two Venezuelan volcanoes which have been subjected to secret scientific
investigations. Page’s 106-108 has the following:
‘The
Agartha, that mysterious underground kingdom that, according to the writer
Ossendowski, lies under the Himalaya’s, is now also in South America if we are
to believe certain traditions. It was perhaps this South American Agartha that
Harry Gibson, a Venezuelan pilot, saw during a routine flight in 1964, at the
bottom of two craters in the jungle somewhere between the Sierra Maigualida and
the Orinoco River.
‘It
is a strange story, and one would be tempted to place it in the same category
as reports of imaginary kingdoms — El Dorado, Paititi, Moricz’s tunnel – if it
had not been taken very seriously by two respected archeologists, David Nott
Rofi Liverpool and Charles Brewer Carias, assisted by Venezuelen Air Force and
ten scientists from different nations.
‘The
craters are near the sources of the rivers Caura and Ventuari, and two
mountains known as Pava and Masiati, at the edge of the Sierra Pacaraima. The
volcanoes have been extinct for thousands… of years, so scientists hope to find
plant and animal life in them that has long since disappeared from the rest of
the world.
‘In
January 1974 a first three-member team went down into one of the craters, about
a thousand feet deep and twelve hundred feet wide. They brought back living
plants and animals of species that were either unknown or had been extinct
since the Mesozoic.
‘The
two craters are connected by an underground passage nearly a mile long.
According to unverified rumours, it is stillin use, because traces of recent
activity were found in it.
‘So
much for the openly announced part of the discovery. The most important results
are being kept secret by the Venezuelan scientific authorities, for mysterious
reasons. This secrecy has given rise to private inquiries among the people
living in surrounding mountains, whose local names are Jaua-Jidi and Sari
Inama-Jidi. Fantastic legends concerning the mystery of the two craters have
been gathered…
‘The
rgeion of Jaua-Jidi is a dense, very sparsely inhabited forest. It has been
difficult for Venezuelan investigator to make contact with the primitive people
who live there. They shun outsiders, speak an unknown language and do not
understand Spanish. Half-breeds from the town of Esmeralda, on the Orinoco,
have been able to approah them, however.
‘Strange
people wearing strange clothes have been seen several times in the forest of Jaua-Jidi,
one of the reported. They seem unwilling to approach the Indians and they
venture only a short distance way from the craters. Their skin is the color of
yellowed ivory; they have big eyes, like a jaguar’s, and long hair of different
colors. They seam fearful and run away whenever they hear an unusual sound.
They are thought to live at the bottoms of the craters and in vast underground
rooms, with secret entrances in the forest.’
‘Other
reports would seem to indicate that the people of the kingdom of Two Craters’
are in almost constant contact with space beings, but it should be pointed out
that sightings of flying saucers are more common in Central and South America
that any where else in the world.
‘The
Indians of the forest say that at night the trees on the rim of each volcano
are illuminated by a soft green light that apparently comes from the bottom.
Occasionally something, that looks like a ‘little round airplane’ comes out of
the darkness, enters the green halo and disappears into the volcano.
‘Two
or three nights before David Nott, Brewer Carias, G. Dunsterville and their
companions came to the site, intensified activity by the flying ‘things’ was
observed. They were as numerous as a swarm of bees but, perhaps because of
their distance from the observers, they flew without making any discernible
sound.
‘The
Indians felt that the strange people were receiving heavy reinforcements, or
else that they were moving out before the archaeologists came. In any case they
left little trace of their presence in the underground passages, but enough to
give convincing evidence that their existence is not a myth. The Indians
believe that the ‘Kingdom of the Two Craters’ extends under the mountains and
that, for the time being, its entrances are tightly closed.
‘In
Lima, Zizi Ghenea told me that a little forest of trees extinct everywhere else
grew inside the caves and the craters, and that in it lived animals from the
Tertiary.
‘What
is strange about the whole affair, in which legend is mingled with fact, is the
Venezuelan governments’ inexplicable silence and secrecy in which the
expedition’s report has been kept.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
···
From: Here and Now