Statistik

300.976Besucher gesamt
1Besucher heute
49Besucher gestern
1.207Besucherrekord
10Im Moment online
473Maximal online
2.106.750Seitenaufrufe
23.08.2009Zählerstart am
 

RSS Feeds

Startseite

Wissenswertes

Termine

MoDiMiDoFrSaSo
  0102030405
06070809101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930   

 

Rechtliches

Forum switch to English language keinen Seitencache mehr benutzen Infospalte auf der rechten Seite ausblenden auf das dynamische Seitenlayout wechseln keine Wikipediabegriffe automatisch verlinken keine Begriffe automatisch verlinken 

Starting somewhere on the Cajamarquilla plain, near Pisco, Peru, there is an anomalous artificial band of holes that has never been thoroughly investigated. They put the Nasca lines to shame, as the holes are in rocky terrain and the angle of the holes are perpendicular with the angle of the slope. They would be very labor intensive if they were made by man. "They vary in depth to about 6-7 feet deep yet some are merely shallow indents as if not completed - though surrounded by those that are." Quoted from the following URL.

www.anomalies-unlimited.com&n bsp;

The "band of holes" were first revealed in the January 1933 edition of National Geographic, page 93, in the article, "Air Adventures in Peru".

In "Pathways of the Gods", von Daniken provided a number of pictures and some descriptions of the "band of holes", but the beginning and end of the holes were never identified. In general, the band is eight holes across spanning about 24 meters.

The extent of the "band of holes" should be readily visible on satellite photos and I cannot understand why the scholars and universities that study "things Peru" seem to ignore this anomaly. Maybe they don't want to know. Some archaeologists have suggested they were dug to store grain (kilometerss from any settlement & no tops), others stating they were graves (no bones were ever found), plus a few others just as absurd.