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Guatemala: UFO experts amazed by Mayan panels just unearthed
Blogged by
Claudia
at
9:04 AM
Labels:
abduction,
aliens,
carving,
el mirador,
el-mirador,
extraterrestrial,
mayan,
panel,
reptilian,
stone,
UFO,
UFO Ovni
Michael Cohen
m.cohen@allnewsweb.com
Reuters reported this week that archaeologists working in deep in Guatemala’s northern jungle have unearthed incredible carved panels that are believed to depict scenes from Mayan creation myths involving monsters, serpents and deities. The panels were discovered on the site of El-Mirador, the largest known Mayan city in the world which is constantly being excavated revealing more surprises. The city itself is remarkable in that it contained the complex roads, canals and impressive structures one would expect of a modern metropolis. The sites head researcher Richard Hansen has dated the panels to around 300 BC. As expected there was no mention of aliens or UFOs in relation to the find. Ufologists have been concentrating in particular on Mayan civilization and mythology for decades, probably more so than any other ancient civilisation. Its astronomy and myths of immortal beings arriving from the stars to give humans knowledge are well known. Ufologists are now marvelling at the latest image of Mayan mythology carved in stone. Many have already noted that the image shown on Reuters clearly depicts a UFO surrounded by two non-human beings covered in some form of technological equipment. Interestingly the date range given for the carvings puts their creation not long after Ezekiel’s graphic descriptions of wheels within wheels. Reuters has published a photo of one of the Mayan panels and to say that the similarity to Ezekiel’s wheels and ‘living creatures’ is striking might be putting it mildly. I don’t think the proof of the theory that civilizations were once guided by alien visitors could get any stronger. The only question is when will our friends from space openly return and give us some guidance, possibly more needed now than then.
To see photo’s click here
Learn more about El Mirador here and also at Idaho State University's website here.
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Learn more about Richard Hansen's work about the Maya:
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1 comment:
Having studied Mayan Art I am not convinced.
You can clearly see familiar characteristics that suggest this is one of serpent/dragon mythical creatures that you can see depicted in the masks of the two figures framing the object.
debunked
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