Paranormal Russia's Valley of Death
Paranormal Russia's Valley of Death
The Paranormalistics: Paranormal Russia's Valley of Death
http://paranormalistics.blogspot.ro/2012/05/paranormal-russias-valley-of-death.html
Is there an ancient alien structure in Russia's "Valley of
Death"?
In northwestern Yakutia in Siberia, in the basin of the Upper
Viliuy River, there is a hard-to-reach area that bears the marks of
a tremendous cataclysm that took place some 800 years ago, which
toppled the entire forest cover and scattered stone fragments over
hundreds of square kilometres. Distributed across this area are
mysterious metal objects located deep underground in the
permafrost. On the surface, their presence is revealed only by
patches of weird vegetation. The ancient name of this area is
Uliuiu Cherkechekh, which translates as "the Valley of Death".
For many years the Yakut people have given a very wide berth to
this remote area that has played and still plays a special,
powerful role in the fate not only of civilisation but of the
planet as a whole. After having systematised a large quantity of
reports and material of various kinds, we decided to inform you of
something that may change perceptions of the world around us and
our place in it, if humanity can take heed of what is stated
here.
In order to provide the fullest possible picture, we have
divided our account into three sections:
The first contains the facts and eyewitness reports in the form
in which they reached us.
The second presents the ancient legends of peoples living in
this region and the epic poetry of neighbouring peoples who
observed strange phenomena. This is important so that you can carry
out your own investigation and appreciate for yourselves every
detail of the narrative.
Finally, we discuss what lies behind all this.
Eyewitness Reports
The area in question can be described as a solid mass of swamps,
alternating with near-impassable taiga, covering more than 100,000
square kilometres. Some fairly curious rumours have become attached
to the area regarding metal objects of unknown origin located
across its expanse.
In order to shed light on whatever it was that, existing barely
perceptibly alongside us, gave rise to these rumours, we had to go
into the ancient history of this region to discover its beliefs and
legends. We managed to recreate certain elements of the local
palaeotoponymy and these matched in an astonishing manner the
content of the ancient legends. Everything indicated that the
legends and rumours were referring to quite specific things.In
ancient times, the Valley of Death was part of a nomadic route used
by the Evenk people, from Bodaibo to Annybar and on to the coast of
the Laptev Sea. Right up until 1936, a merchant named Savvinov
traded on the route; when he gave up the business, the inhabitants
gradually abandoned those places. Finally, the aged merchant and
his granddaughter Zina decided to move to Siuldiukar. Somewhere in
the land between two rivers that is known as Kheldyu ("iron house"
in the local language), the old man led her to a small, slightly
flattened reddish arch where, beyond a spiral passageway, there
turned out to be a number of metal chambers in which they then
spent the night. Zina's grandfather told her that even in the
harshest frosts it was warm as summer in the chambers.
Mysterious Illnesses in the "Iron House"
In days gone by, there were bold men among the local hunters who
would sleep in these rooms. But then they began to fall seriously
ill, and those who had spent several nights in a row there soon
died. The Yakut said that the place was "very bad, marshy, and
beasts do not go there". The location of all these constructions
was known only to old men who had been hunters in their youth and
had often visited these places. They lived a nomadic life and their
knowledge of the peculiarities of the areawhere one could go, and
where one couldn'twas a matter of vital necessity. Their
descendants have adopted a settled way of life, so this knowledge
from the past has been lost.At present, the only things that point
to the existence of these constructions are ancient place names
that have survived in part and all manner of rumours. But each of
those toponyms represents hundreds, if not thousands, of square
kilometres.
In 1936, alongside the Olguidakh ("place with a cauldron")
River, a geologist directed by elderly natives came upon a smooth
metal hemisphere, reddish in colour, protruding from the ground
with such a sharp edge that it "cut a fingernail". Its walls were
about two centimetres thick and it stuck out of the ground roughly
a fifth of its diameter. It stood leaning over so that it was
possible to ride under it on a reindeer.
The geologist despatched a description of it to Yakutsk, the
regional centre. In 1979, an archaeological expedition from Yakutsk
attempted to find the hemisphere he had discovered. The team
members had with them a guide who had seen the structure several
times in his youth, but he said that the area was greatly changed
and so they failed to find anything. It must be said that in that
locality you can pass within 10 paces of something and not notice
it, so earlier discoveries have been pure luck.
Back in 1853, R. Maak, a noted explorer of the region,
wrote:
"In Suntar [a Yakut settlement] I was told that in the upper
reaches of the Viliuy there is a stream called Algy timirbit (which
translates as "the large cauldron sank") flowing into the Viliuy.
Close to its bank in the forest there is a gigantic cauldron made
of copper. Its size is unknown as only the rim is visible above the
ground, but several trees grow within it"
The same thing was recorded by N. D. Arkhipov, a researcher into
the ancient cultures of Yakutia:
"Among the population of the Viliuy basin there is a legend from
ancient times about the existence in the upper reaches of that
river of bronze cauldrons orolguis. This legend deserves attention
as the areas that are the supposed location of the mythical
cauldrons contain several streams with the name Olguidakh 'Cauldron
Stream'."
And here is a passage from a letter penned in 1996 by another
person who visited the Valley of Death. Mikhail Koretsky from
Vladivostok wrote:
"I was there three times. The first time was in 1933, when I was
tenI travelled with my father when he went there to earn some
moneythen in 1937, without my father. And the last time was in 1947
as part of a group of youngsters."The 'Valley of Death' extends
along a right-hand tributary of the Viliuy River. In point of fact
it is a whole chain of valleys along its flood lands. All three
times I was there with a guide, a Yakut. We didn't go there because
life was good, but because there, in the back of beyond, you could
pan for gold without the threat that at the end of the season you'd
be robbed or get a bullet in the back of your head."As for
mysterious objects, there are probably a lot of them there, as in
three seasons I saw seven of those 'cauldrons'. They all struck me
as totally perplexing: for one thing, there was their sizebetween
six and nine metres in diameter."Secondly, they were made of some
strange metal. Everyone has written that they were made of copper,
but I'm sure it isn't copper. The thing is that even a sharpened
cold chisel will not mark the 'cauldrons' (we tried more than
once). The metal doesn't break off and can't be hammered. On
copper, a hammer would definitely have left noticeable dents. But
this 'copper' is covered over with a layer of some unknown material
resembling emery. Yet it's not an oxidation layer and not scaleit
can't be chipped or scratched, either."We didn't come across shafts
going down into the ground with chambers. But I did note that the
vegetation around the 'cauldrons' is anomaloustotally different
from what's growing around. It's more opulent: large-leaved
burdock; very long withes; strange grass, one and a half or two
times the height of a man. In one of the 'cauldrons', the whole
group of us (six people) spent the night. We didn't sense anything
bad, and we calmly left without any sort of unpleasant occurrences.
Nobody fell seriously ill afterwards. Except that three months
later, one of my friends lost all his hair. And on the left side of
my head (the side I slept on), three small sore spots the size of
match-heads appeared. I've tried to get rid of them all my life,
but they're still with me today."None of our efforts to break off
even a small piece from the strange 'cauldrons' was successful. The
only thing I did manage to bring away was a stone. Not an ordinary
one, though: half of a perfect sphere, six centimetres in diameter.
It was black in colour and bore no visible signs of having been
worked, yet was very smooth as if polished. I picked it up from the
ground inside one of those cauldrons."I took my souvenir of Yakutia
with me to the village of Samarka, Chuguyevka district, Primorsky
region (the Soviet Far East), where my parents were living in 1933.
I was laid up with nothing to do until my grandmother decided to
build a house. We needed to put glass in the windows and there
wasn't a glass-cutter in the entire village. I tried scoring it
with the edge of that half of a stone sphere, and it turned out to
cut with amazing ease. After that, my find was often used like a
diamond by all our relatives and friends. In 1937 I gave the stone
to my grandfather, but that autumn he was arrested and taken to
Magadan where he lived on without trial until 1968 and then died.
Now no-one knows where my stone got to"
In his letter, Koretsky stresses that in 1933 his Yakut guide
told him that:
"five or ten years before, he had discovered several spherical
cauldrons (they were absolutely round) that protruded high (higher
than a man) out of the ground. They looked brand new. Later the
hunter had seen them again, now broken and scattered."
Koretsky also noted that when he visited one "cauldron" a second
time, in the intervening few years it had sunk appreciably into the
ground.
A. Gutenev and Yu. Mikhailovsky, two researchers who lived in
the town of Mirny in Yakutia, reported that in 1971 an old hunter
belonging to the Evenk people had said that in the area between two
rivers known as Niugun Bootur ("fiery champion") and Atadarak
("place with a three-sided harpoon"), there is poking out of the
ground the very thing that gave the place its namea "very big"
three-faceted iron harpoonwhile in the area between two rivers
known as Kheliugur ("iron people"), there is an iron burrow in
which lie "thin, black, one-eyed people in clothes of iron". He
said that he could take people there, that it was not far away, but
no-one believed him. In the meantime, he died.
The Fiery Giant
One more of these objects was, to all appearances, covered after
the building of a dam on the Viliuy, slightly below the Erbiie.
According to the account of one of the builders of the Viliuy
hydro-electric project, when they constructed a diversion canal and
drained the main channel they discovered in it a convex metal
"spot". Deadlines were pressing and after a cursory inspection of
the find the project managers gave orders for work to
continue.There is a host of tales from people who came across
similar constructions by accident, but without precise directions
it is extremely difficult to find these again in the depressingly
monotonous terrain.
Once some old men said that flowing in the place called Tong
Duurai is a stream called Ottoamokh ("holes in the ground") and
that around it there are incredibly deep openings known as "the
laughing chasms". That same name also crops up in legends that
state that this is the dwelling of a fiery giant who destroys
everything around. Roughly every six or seven centuries, a
monstrous "fireball" bursts out from there and it either flies off
somewhere into the distance and (judging by the chronicles and
legends of other peoples) explodes there, or it explodes directly
above its exit pointas a result of which, the area for hundreds of
kilometres around has been reduced to a scorched desert with
shattered rocks.
Yakut legends contain many references to explosions, fiery
whirlwinds and blazing spheres rising into the air. And all those
phenomena are somehow or other associated with the mysterious metal
constructions found in the Valley of Death. Some of them are large,
round, "iron houses" standing on numerous lateral supports. They
have neither windows nor doors, only a "spacious manhole" at the
top of the dome. Some of them have sunk almost completely into the
permafrost, with only a barely noticeable arch-like protuberance
remaining on the surface. Witnesses who are strangers to each other
describe this "resounding metal house" in the same way. Other
objects scattered across the area are the metallic hemispherical
lids that cover something unknown. Yakut legends say that the
mysterious blazing spheres are produced by "an orifice belching
smoke and fire" with a "banging steel lid".This is also the source
for the fiery whirlwinds that from the descriptions sound very
similar to the effects of present-day atomic explosions. Roughly a
century before each explosion or series of explosions, a
fast-flying fiery sphere emerged from the "iron orifice" and,
without causing great damage, soared upwards in the form of a thin
column of fire. At the top of this, a very large fireball appeared.
Accompanied by four claps of thunder in succession, it soared to an
even greater height and flew off, leaving behind a long "trail of
smoke and fire". Then a cannonade of its explosions sounded in the
distance...
In the 1950s, the Soviet military cast an eye over this area,
evidently due to the exceptionally sparse population on its
northern fringes, and conducted a series of atomic tests there. One
of the explosions produced a great puzzle, and foreign specialists
are still speculating about it. As the German radio stationDeutsche
Wellereported in September 1991 that, when a 10-kilogram nuclear
device was being tested in 1954, for unknown reasons the size of
the explosion exceeded the calculations by a factor of 2,000 to
3,000, reaching 2030 megatons, as was registered by seismic
laboratories around the world. The cause of such a significant
discrepancy in the power of the explosion remained unclear. The
newsagency TASS put out an announcement that a compact hydrogen
bomb had been tested in airburst conditions, but it later emerged
that this was incorrect. After the tests, restricted zones were
established in the area and secret work was carried out for some
years.
Myths and Legends
Let us try to look into the distant past as it is reflected in
epic poetry. As the legends passed on by word of mouth testify, in
the remote period when everything began, the area was inhabited by
a small number of Tungus nomads. Once upon a time, their distant
neighbours saw that their land was suddenly wrapped in impenetrable
darkness and the surroundings were shaken by a deafening roar. A
hurricane of unseen force arose and the land was riven by mighty
blows. Lightning crossed the sky in all directions. When everything
calmed down and the darkness dispersed, an unprecedented sight met
the nomads' eyes. In the midst of the scorched land, glowing in the
sun stood a tall vertical structure that was visible at a distance
of many days' journey.
For a long time, the structure gave out unpleasant,
ear-splitting noises and gradually diminished in height until it
disappeared under the ground altogether. In place of the tall
structure there was an immense, yawning, vertical "orifice". In the
strange words of the legends, it consisted of three tiers of
"laughing chasms". Its depths supposedly contained an underground
country with its own sun that was, however, "waning". A choking
stench rose from the orifice, and so no-one settled near it. From a
distance, people could sometimes see a "rotating island" appear
above the opening, and this then proved to be its "banging lid".
Those who were tempted by curiosity to take a closer look never
returned.
Centuries went by. Life went on as before. Nobody anticipated
anything extraordinary, but one day a small earthquake occurred and
the sky was pierced by a thin "fiery whirlwind". At the top of it,
a dazzling fireball appeared. Accompanied by "a succession of four
thunderclaps" and leaving behind a trail of fire, this sphere shot
off along a shallow downward trajectory and, after vanishing beyond
the horizon, exploded. The nomads were perturbed but did not
abandon the lands that were home to them, since the "demon" had not
caused them any harm but had exploded over the lands of the hostile
neighbouring tribe. A few decades later, events repeated
themselves: the fireball flew off in the same direction and again
destroyed only their neighbours. Evidently this "demon" was in some
way their protector and they began to create legends about it,
calling it Niurgun Bootur, "the fiery champion".
But some time later, events occurred that horrified those in
even the most distant surroundings. A gigantic fireball emerged
from the opening with a deafening, thunderous roar and
explodedright overhead! A tremendous earthquake ensued. Some hills
were cut across by a crack more than 100 metres deep. Following the
explosion, a "fire-raging sea" continued to swash about with a
disc-like "rotating island" above it. The effects of the explosion
extended over a radius of more than a thousand kilometres. The
nomadic tribes which survived on the edges of the area fled in
different directions, seeking to distance themselves from the fatal
spot, but that did save them from death. They all succumbed to some
kind of strange illness that was passed on only by inheritance. Yet
they left behind them precise accounts of what had taken place, on
the basis of which Yakut storytellers began to compose beautiful,
exceptionally tragic legends.
The fireball of Niurgun Bootur
A little over 600 years passed. Many generations of nomads had
come and gone. The precepts of the remote ancestors had been
forgotten and people again settled the area.
Then history repeated itself The fireball of Niurgun Bootur
appeared above a fiery whirlwind and again flew off to explode
beyond the horizon. A few decades later, a second fireball rent the
air (now it was called Kiun Erbiie ("the gleaming aerial herald" or
"messenger"). Then came another devastating explosion that the
legends again anthropomorphised. It was given the name Uot Usumu
Tong Duurai, which can be roughly translated as "the criminal
stranger who pierced the earth and hid in the depths, destroying
all around with a fiery whirlwind".It is important to note that on
the eve of the flight of the negative hero Tong Duurai, there
appeared in the sky the messenger of the heavenly Dyesegeithe
champion Kiun Erbiie who crossed the firmament as a "falling star"
or "dashing lightning" so as to warn Niurgun Bootur of the coming
battle.
The most significant event in the legends was Tong Duurai
bursting forth from the underground depths and doing battle with
Niurgun Bootur. This took place roughly as follows: firstly, a
snake-like, branching, fiery whirlwind burst forth from the
"orifice", on the top of which there again appeared a fireball of
gigantic size which, after several peals of thunder, shot high into
the air. He was accompanied in flight by his retinue"a swarm of
fatally bloody whirlwinds" that wrought havoc in the vicinity.
But there were occasions when Tong Duurai encountered Niurgun
Bootur above the place where he took off; and following these, the
area remained lifeless for a long time. The picture painted of
these events varies quite considerably: several "fiery champions"
might emerge from the opening at once, fly some distance and
explode in one place. This happened with the flight of Tong Duurai.
A study of the soil layers indicates that the interval between
explosions does not exceed 600700 years.
The legends vividly reflect these events, but the absence of a
written tradition means that they have not been registered in
documentary form. It seems, though, that this lacuna is compensated
for by the historical chronicles of other peoples.
The Chronicles of Other Peoples
Altogether, at approximate intervals of 600700 years, several
explosions or, rather, a whole complex of events including the
precursors, took place. All these occurrences were painstakingly
recorded in epic poetry, traditions and legends. It is a curious
fact that similar legends arose in the equatorial zone of the
planet, where explosions or "giant fireballs" that suddenly
appeared in the sky destroyed several centres of ancient
civilisations.
Judging by the results of archaeological investigations carried
out in the Upper Viliuy region by S. A. Fedoseyeva, the
intermittent, wave-like settlement of this territory can be traced
back roughly to the fourth millennium BC. In the first millennium
AD, the line of historical development is interruptedand this does
not contradict the possible date for the last historical explosion
as September 1380. The cloud it raised blotted out the Sun over
Europe for several hours. In several geo-active zones, powerful
earthquakes took place.
This event is recorded in written sources. In Russian
chronicles, it coincided with the Battle of Kulikovo Field:
"the gloom dispersed only in the second half of the day. A wind
of such strength blew, that an arrow shot from a bow could not fly
against it"
This factor made a positive contribution to the Russian
victory.
However, the explosions are described in Tungus legends far more
vividly than in other sources. Judging by the accounts, they were
many times worse than modern nuclear weapons.
If we take 1380 as our starting date and go back into the past,
we can trace such moments. In 830, for example, the culture of the
Mayans who inhabited the Yucatn Peninsula in Mexico was destroyed.
Many of their cities were reduced to ruins by an explosion of
monstrous force.
Some passages in the Bible are akin to the Yakut legends, e.g.,
the description of the plagues of Egypt and the demise of Sodom and
Gomorrah. In one of the oases of the Arabian Peninsula, an ancient
town was destroyed and literally reduced to ashes. According to
legend, this took place when a huge fireball that appeared in the
sky exploded.
At Mohenjo-daro on the Indian subcontinent, archaeologists
discovered a devastated city. The marks of the catastrophemelted
stone wallsclearly pointed to an explosion comparable with a
nuclear bomb. Similar events are also described in Chinese
chronicles from the 14th century. They say that, far to the north,
a black cloud rose above the horizon and covered half the sky,
scattering large fragments of stone. Stones also dropped from the
sky in Scandinavia and Germany, where fire broke out in several
towns. Scholars established that they were quite ordinary stones,
and conjectured that a volcano had erupted somewhere.
Perhaps the cause of these misfortunes was really Tong Duurai
who has been bursting out from under the ground for many centuries?
While Niurgun Bootur blotted out half of the sky at his appearance,
Tong Duurai considerably exceeded him in size and, ascending into
the heavens, completely disappeared from view.
We note that in the Valley of Death, a rise in the background
radiation is observed at certain intervals of timea phenomenon that
specialists can't explain.
Tunguska Explosion
The total power of the explosion exceeded the combined power of
the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki more than 2,000
times over! Apart from that, the Tunguska explosion caused:
an anomalous glow in the sky that was observed as late as 10
days afterwards, and the intense appearance of silvery clouds;
massive radiation of light and heat;
disruption of the normal functioning of meteorological
instruments and the appearance of surface earth tremors;
a tremendous sound wave that travelled twice around the
globe;
the felling of trees over an enormous area of over 2,000 square
kilometres;
weak traces of radioactivity, detected in tree samples and the
polar ice layers dating from 1908;
anomalous properties of the soil and minerals in the area of the
Tunguska explosion;
the unusually rapid growth of vegetation at the epicentre of the
Tunguska explosion;
cooling of the Earth's climate in the following few years.
Despite the fact that such a tremendous event did not go
unnoticed, the first attempts to discover what had actually
occurred in the remote Siberian taiga were only made many years
later, in 1927. Since then, dozens of research expeditions have
visited the area, hundreds of scientific papers have been written
and several hundred hypotheses put forward about the causes of the
event. Not one of them, however, has been able to explain fully the
complex phenomena that preceded and accompanied the Tunguska
explosion. Some of the phenomena observed by eyewitnesses simply do
not fit within the framework of existing theories. Much of what
happened then cannot be interpreted at all from the standpoint of
present-day scientific thinking.More than that, one gets the
persistent impression that we have come up against something
completely outside the bounds of our customary understanding of the
world about us. Perhaps today we are closer than ever before to a
solution to the mystery that will become a turning point in the
development of human consciousness. But it will require a certain
boldness, the ability to look with an open mind untrammelled by the
dogmas current in science in order to properly assess the most
inexplicable episodes of the event.
A very, very long time ago, someone constructed in what is known
as "the Valley of Death", a complex that still today is protecting
the Earth from meteorites and asteroids. Of course, such a
suggestion isstaggering. It is hard even to contemplate such a
possibility. It follows that for thousands of years, something
existed alongside us that exceeds not only our current achievements
but even our boldest fantasies about what might be achievedand we
failed to notice! Naturally, none of those who researched the
various scientifically inexplicable consequences of the Tunguska
catastrophe could have imagined that all the traces left by the
explosions were the result of the activities of some ancient cosmic
defence complex left by unknown builders!
Local Legends and the Shamans' Warnings
Here is one detail preserved in the ancestral memory of the
local population, passed down through the millennia in an ancient
epic poem. The legends passed on by word of mouth tell how this
land was once suddenly wrapped in impenetrable darkness and the
surroundings were shaken by a deafening roar. A hurricane of unseen
force arose and the land was shaken by mighty blows.When everything
had calmed down and the darkness had dispersed, an unprecedented
sight met their eyes. In the midst of the scorched land, glowing in
the sun stood a tall vertical structure that was visible at a
distance of many days' journey. For a long period of time, the
structure gave out unpleasant,ear-splitting noisesand gradually
diminished in height until it had disappeared under the ground
altogether. In place of the tall structure there was an immense,
yawning, vertical "orifice".In the course of our exposition of the
facts, we shall present several texts from theOlonkhowhich testify
strongly in favour of the stated hypothesis because of the obvious
technological nature of the events described in the ancient tales.
It is surprising that the people who translated and analysed these
texts did not notice or even suspect this.Let us begin with a
detailed reconstruction of events, trying to form an integral
picture of what preceded and accompanied the 1908 catastrophe.The
first to learn of the coming calamity were the shamans of the
native tribes. Two months before the explosion, rumours of the
approaching "end of the world" began to spread across the taiga.
Going from one settlement to another, the shamans warned the people
of an imminent cataclysm. The people began to move their herds from
the upper reaches of the Podkamennaya Tunguska to the Nizhniaya
Tunguska and further, towards the River Lena.The exodus of the
Evenk began immediately after asuglan(gathering) of all the nomadic
clans who moved around in close proximity, which took place in the
month of Teliat (May). A secret conference of the elders had
resolved that the cyclical course of their wanderings should be
changed and that the clans should move close together along the new
course.Then there was a big ritual occasion at which the "Great
Shaman" announced the "End of the World":
The ancestors said that they had to move from their traditional
places. No one should be there after the month of Teliat in the
month of Muchun [June], thus said the ancestors... The upper people
want to visit Dulia... No one should see that.
And so the nomads began to move across the taiga...Obeying some
inner sense and supporting, as it were, the pronouncements of the
shamans, the wild animals began to leave. The birds flew from their
nesting grounds, the swans left the lakes and the fish disappeared
from the rivers. An immense expanse of taiga, measuring several
tens of thousands of square kilometres, lost its fauna. Only those
who did not believe the shamans' words remained in the danger
zone.All this speaks for itself. Obviously some early warning of
the approaching event was given through the shamans who "spoke with
the spirits of the ancestors". The animals, birds and fish reacted
instinctively to the approaching danger, reacting to the negative
influence of the Earth's increasing electromagnetic field in that
part of the taiga.After studying the texts of theOlonkho, talking
with local hunters and those still alive who remember the distant
events, we formed the impression that the complex in question is
scattered across different parts of the taiga and located mainly
underground.
The Installation's Power Plant
Destruction or deflection of meteorites and asteroids is
achieved using a force field which is conveyed in concentrated form
by some kind of electromagnetic formations that resemble glowing,
fiery spheres. In essence, these are something like ball lightning,
with the difference being that the largest ball lightning known to
science is about two metres in diameter, whereas the spheres used
to deflect or destroy meteorites are of gigantic dimensionssome 60
metres in diameter!It was their flight that was seen in 1908 by
thousands of people across much of Siberia, with the result that
the witnesses of the Tunguska event attributed the whole thing to
the appearance of a series of huge ball lightning!The "plasma
spheres" are apparently generated by a power plant located deep
inside the Earth at a site that was quite deliberately chosen by
someone. It is associated with a geophysically distinctive area of
the planet: the East Siberian magnetic anomaly. The
periodicalTekhnika Molodiozhi(issue 1, 1984) called it "a magnetic
super-anomaly, the source of which lies at a depth of half the
Earth's radius". In other words, the power plant of the complex
draws on the energy of the planet and is itself to some degree, it
would seem, one of the causes of this super-anomaly.Preparation for
countering the approaching Tunguska meteorite (it was indeed a
meteorite; Kulik was in a certain sense correct) began two months
before the explosion, as is confirmed by the behaviour of the
shamans and the fauna of the taiga. Roughly 10 days before the
explosion, the "Installation" located in the Valley of Death
shifted into an active phase. It was the activation of the power
plant, and the increase in its energy level occasioned by the
complex beginning its preparations for the generation of energy
(electromagnetic spheres) acting upon the environment, that became
the cause for the appearance of major atmospheric anomalies
associated with increased tension in the Earth's electromagnetic
field.The effect of the Installation was so powerful that in the 10
days before the explosion, in many countries of Europe as well as
western Siberia, the darkness of night was replaced by an unusual
illumination as if those areas were experiencing the "white nights"
phenomenon of high-latitude summers. Everywhere there appeared,
shining brightly in the twilight of dawn and dusk, silvery clouds
stretching east to west that formed along the lines of force, like
those that occur between the poles of a magnet. There was a sense,
as noted by E. Krinov, one of the researchers into the Tunguska
explosion, of the approach of some unusual natural phenomenon.Many
years later, researchers from Tomsk came across a forgotten
publication by a Professor Weber about a powerful geo-magnetic
disturbance observed in a laboratory at Kiel University in Germany
for three days before the intrusion of the Tunguska object, and
which ended at the very hour when the gigantic bolide exploded
above the Central Siberian Plateau.
Ten days passed and then, on the morning of 30 June 1908, a body
from outer space entered the Earth's atmosphere at immense speed.
It followed a trajectory from southeast to northwest. The
determination of the exact trajectory of the meteorite plays an
important role in the investigation of the event, primarily
becauseas we shall seethere were several objects moving in the sky
above the Siberian taiga, approaching the explosion site from
different sides. It was the discrepancies in the accounts of
eyewitnesseswho at one and the same time observed objects above
areas of Siberia far remote from one another, moving on different
courses but towards a single pointthat confused researchers,
prompting the hypothesis that it was probably a spaceship that had
been manoeuvring above the Siberian taiga.Thirty-eight minutes
before the destruction of the Tunguska meteorite, the Valley of
Death complex moved into its culminating phase. The generation of
the sphereswhich, for the sake of convenience, we shall call
"terminators"began.At the Stepanovsky mine (close to the town of
Yuzhno-Eniseisk)an earthquake began 30 minutes before the fall of
the meteorite.One witness to these events was next to a small lake
when the ground started to shake beneath his feet. Something like
an earthquake began. Suddenly, down inside him,an inexplicable,
inhuman sense of fear arose. It was as if some force was driving
him away from the lake. At that moment, the water in the lake began
to drop down, and as it flowed away, as if into a crack, the bottom
appeared which was shifting apart like two leaves. Indentations
could be seen on the edges of the two gigantic leaves. The witness
was seized by an impulsive animal terror and fled as fast as his
legs could carry him. After running a considerable distance, he
tripped on a bush and fell; and when he got to his feet and looked
back, he saw rising from what had been the lake a column of bright
light, at the top of which appeared a ball. All this was
accompanied bya terrible roaring and humming. His clothing began to
smoulder, the radiation burnt his face and ears...This episode
concurs astonishingly well with the texts of theOlonkhoepic and the
tales old men tell of the place called Tong Duurai, across which
the Ottoamokh ("holes in the ground") stream flows, where there are
shafts of incredible depth known as "the laughing chasms". From
these, the legends say, fiery whirlwinds fly. After a long period
of silence, roughly a century before each major explosion or series
of explosions there would be a smaller-scale event. The legends say
that a thin column of fire emerged from the "iron orifice". At the
top of this, a very large fireball appeared. It was escorted in
flight by its retinue, "a swarm of fatally bloody whirlwinds" that
wrought havoc in the vicinity.Accompanied by four claps of thunder
in succession, it soared to an even greater height and flew off,
leaving behind a long "trail of smoke and fire". Then a cannonade
of its explosions sounded in the distance...It is remarkable that
Yakut legends contain so many references to explosions, fiery
whirlwinds and the launch of flaming spheres disgorged by "an
orifice belching smoke and fire" with a "banging steel lid", in the
depths of which lies a whole subterranean country. It is inhabited
by a fiery villain "who sows contagion and hurls a fiery ball"the
giant Uot Usumu Tong Duurai (which can be translated as "the
criminal stranger who pierced the earth and hid in the depths,
destroying all around with a fiery whirlwind").
Eyewitness Testimony
That is what the legends say, and this is the account of G. K.
Kulesh, who was an observer at a weather station in Kirensk, about
460 kilometres from the site of the Tunguska explosion:
On 30 June an unusual phenomenon was observed to the northwest
of Kirensk that lasted roughly from 7.15 to 8 am. I did not see it
myself, as I sat down to work after recording the reading of the
meteorological instruments. This is what occurred (I give the gist
of what those who witnessed it said).At 7.15 am, a fiery pillar
appeared to the northwest, about four sagens [over 8 metres] in
diameter in the shape of a spear.When the pillar disappeared, five
strong brief bangs were heard, like cannon shots following quickly
and distinctly one after another. Then a dense cloud appeared at
that place.About 15 minutes later, the same sort of bangs were
heard again; another 15 minutes later they were repeated. The
ferryman, a former soldier and generally an intelligent,
worldly-wise man, counted 14 bangs in three groups. His duties
meant he was on the riverbank and saw and heard the whole
phenomenon from start to finish.[author's emphasis in bold]Many
people saw the pillar of fire, but the bangs were heard by an even
greater number. There were peasants in town from the village of
Korelinaya that lies 20 versts [21 km] from Kirensk on the nearest
Tunguska. They reported that they had had a powerful earth tremor
such that window panes were broken in the houses...the mark on the
barograph roll bears this out.
In the archives of the former Irkutsk Magnetic and
Meteorological Observatory, investigators managed to find notes
written by A. K. Kokorin, who was an observer at a weather station
on the River Kezhma, about 600 km from the Tunguska explosion site.
In his observation journal for June 1908, the section headed
"Notes" contains an exceptionally important entry. It shows that
there was certainly more than one body in the air at that time.
At 7 am, two fiery circles [spheres] of gigantic size appeared
to the north; 4 minutes after appearing, the circles disappeared;
soon after the disappearance of the fiery circles a loud noise was
heard, similar to the sound of the wind, that went from north to
south; the noise lasted about 5 minutes; then followed sounds and
thundering, like shots from enormous guns, that made the windows
rattle. Those shots continued for 2 minutes, and after them came a
crack like a rifle-shot. These last sounds lasted 2 minutes.
Everything took place in broad daylight.
At that time, T. Naumenko was observing the flight of a sphere
from the village of Kezhma which stands on the River Angara. He
asserted that the body was larger than the Moon and crossed in
front of the Sun, which at that time was at a height of 27 above
the horizon. At that same moment, the Tunguska meteorite flew over
the village of Mironovo (58 14' N, 109 29' E).The first to see the
flight of one of the "terminators" carrying a powerful
electromagnetic charge were the inhabitants of the village of
Alexandrovka (southern Altai territory), which is almost 1,500
kilometres away from the site of the explosion.The account left by
Ivan Nikanorovich Kudriavtsev, who witnessed the flight of the
fiery sphere, contains details pointing to the electromagnetic
nature of the "terminator":
...30 June 1908 was a clear day... I was sitting opposite a
window looking NW. Our village, Alexandrovka, extended along a
gorge... Across from the village on the Semi ridge rose the peak of
Mount Gliaden. At 7 in the morning, the Sun had already risen but
not yet appeared from behind Gliaden. And then suddenly a bright
sphere appeared in the sky; it rapidly grew in size and brightness.
It was flying towards the NW. The flying sphere was the size of the
Moon, only brighter; not dazzlingly bright, though: you could watch
its flight without looking away. It flew very quickly. The sphere
left behind it on its course a white smoky trail wider than the
sphere itself. As soon as this sphere appeared, the whole locality
was lit up by some unnatural light and that light did not increase
evenly, but with some sort of fluctuations, wave-like flashes.
There was no noise, no roar accompanying the sphere's flight, but
the unnatural fluctuating light inspired some sort of fear,
anxiety...[author's emphasis]
Ye. Sarychev, questioned by D. F. Landsberg in Kansk on 11
October 1921, said:
With the start of the noise a sort of glow appeared in the air,
round in shape, about half the size of the Moon, with a bluish
tinge, flying rapidly in a direction from Filimonovo towards
Irkutsk. The glow left a trail in the form of a pale bluish stripe
that extended almost the full length of its course, then gradually
vanished from the end. The glow hid itself behind the mountain
without breaking up. I was unable to note the duration of the
phenomenon, but it was very short. The weather was absolutely clear
and it was still.
At that same time, the flight of a heavenly body was observed in
the south of the Krasnoyarsk territory, 60 km north of Minusinsk,
930 km from the site of the explosion, but moving along a different
trajectory. Roughly at the same time, an object was seen in the
region of the Nizhneye-Ilimskoye settlement, 418 km from the
explosion site. And then, it has been reliably established, a
heavenly body flew over the village of Preobrazhenka, which is on
the Nizhniaya (Lower) Tunguska River. And all these objects were
flying in the same directiontowards one destination: the Shishkov
and Kulik blast areas and Voronov's crater!The picture that forms
from eyewitness accounts clearly shows that the objects observed
from various parts of the taiga could not have been meteorites.
There were many of them and they followed different trajectories,
but towards a single point. Amazingly, the scientists and
researchers who so carefully questioned numerous witnesses were
unable to spot in their accounts any difference between the
behaviour of the meteorite and that of the "terminator spheres"
that closed in large numbers from different directions in order to
destroy it. It is a well known fact that the flight of a meteorite
through the atmosphere is always very short (a matter of seconds)
and very fast (between 6 and 22 km per second), at an angle to the
Earth's surface along a straight trajectory,leaving a trail of fire
and smoke that extends for 200 to 300 km and takes some tens of
minutes to disperse.The reports of researchers and explanations of
scientists speak of a single Tunguska object. Yet the eyewitness
accounts of the event itself and the evidence gathered by
researchers stubbornly indicate that there were several objects in
the sky, following different trajectories from different
directions, but most significantly moving slowly, parallel to the
Earth's surface, sometimes stopping, changing course and speedin
other words, manoeuvringwhich entirely excludes the suggestion that
the objects seen were comets or meteorites. Meteorites and comets
do not fly like that!
Thousands of Observers
Thousands of observers could not have mistaken what they saw, as
the sky was cloudless that morning. People living within a radius
of over 800 km from the place where the cosmic intruder fell
observed the unusual flight of enormous fiery bodies giving off
sparks and leaving rainbow trails behind them. The most important
point, though, is that they did not all see one and the same
object, but different "terminator spheres" that varied in
appearance and behaviour.After the "terminators" were created and
disgorged through the Installation's shafts, they began moving to
some control pointthe place of their last reconnaissance before the
destruction of the meteorite. At a certain stage in their flight,
the spheres stopped to adjust their position in respect to the
falling meteorite and then, tearing off at enormous speed and with
a terrible roaring, rushed to meet it.Below is an extract from the
account of a witness who lived in the village of Moga on the
Nizhniaya Tunguska, 300 km east of the site of the explosion. It
was quoted in Yury Sbitnev's bookEchoand speaks for itself.
...I remember that time wellI was eleven then. I got up quite
early... It was clear and cloudless... Our house was here, where it
still stands, on a hill. I was hammering the scythe.There I was
hitting the scythe, but the sound seemed to come from elsewhere. I
froze and as I listened, a real din started. The sky was clear as
can be, not a cloud in sight. There were no planes or helicopters
back then, of course. It was only later we became familiar with
them. But there was this din. It wasn't like a thunderstorm. And it
kept building up, rumbling louder...Suddenly a second sun rolled
into the sky."Ours", that's to say, was beating down on the back of
my head, and this one was in my eyes. I couldn't look; everything
went black. I shot into the house and that new sun shone in through
this window here and moved across the stove like this...The house
stood, like the majority of Russian houses on the northern rivers,
with its windows looking east and south. One little window faced
northwest and this "sun" was shining through it, colouring the
white wall of the big Russian stove crimson. This glow moved from
right to left, towards the east. And there was ordinary sunlight
coming through the other windows and onto the other wall of the
stove.I looked at the sun blazing down on the stove through that
window and my jaw dropped.I had never seen anything like it.And the
noise kept on rumbling. There was no relief. My grandfather sat on
the stove and began chanting a prayer out loud. He chanted and told
me, "Stiopa, let's pray! All of you pray! It's happened... It's
come..." [The shamans had warned people about the end of the
world.]What praying? I wanted to run somewhere and there was
nowhere. The noise was all around. And a fiery ball was coming at
us. It kept creeping across the stove...And then it stopped...The
fiery sphere that appeared in a clear, cloudless sky approached the
earth with a growing rumble. It grew as you watched, blazed and
became so full of powerful fiery light that it was impossible to
look at it. At some elusive instant, the terrible rumbling turned
into an incessant roar and the sphere stopped moving, hanging above
the ground, like the Sun hangs above the horizon just before
sunset. It is hard to establish the length of time it stopped, but
the fiery sphere stayed motionless long enough for its immobility
to impress itself upon an astounded human mind.I was afraid to look
out of the window, but on the stove I could see that it had
stopped. Then suddenly it gave such a burst of speed, flashed
across the stove and was gone. The thundering noise was awful. The
earth shook. I was knocked to the floor and the glass from the
little window was scattered about as if someone had pushed it in...
I wasn't down on the floor for long. I jumped up, thinking,
"Where's Grandpa? Don't say he's been knocked off!" He was lying on
his stomach on the very edge of the stove and kept asking me,
"Stiopa, what is it? Stiopa, what is it?" He was wet and white,
white... I think the ground was still shaking, the floor shifted
under my feet, or perhaps my legs were trembling. It was
dreadful!...Nobody could understand where it had got to, that
sun.It had been shining just a moment before. And so strong that
the shadows disappeared instantly. And the light, clashing with
light, stripped the world of its familiar, pleasant shapes.
Everything, from the smallest blade of grass to the cedar tree,
suddenly seemed different from how it had always been. Colours
vanished; so did the usual three-dimensionality of the world,
warmth, tenderness. Our world had gone...
Map of the region showing the flight paths of the different
objects.
Judging by the details of this account, the narrator was very
close to a place where a "terminator sphere" had been generated; in
other words, in the immediate proximity of one of the pillars of
energy (fiery whirlwinds) delivering the "terminator" to the
surface.The account recorded by Sbytnev includes this important
element:
Someone saw a fiery pillar as well going down from that
fireball, and for an instant there appeared a sort of huge tree
with a round, fiery crown.Someone noticed that this raging bundle
of light spat out, as it were, one more ball that tore earthwards.
Others, though, insisted there had been no second ball, but that
blaze, that sun, itself hurled itself down slantwise.Many saw it
and there were many different versions. But everyone was agreed
that the movement of that mysterious fiery body stopped and it hung
motionless for a time above the ground. And there was a roaring...
And then there was something like an explosionthe ground shaking
and a rapid movement away, taking off, and the same rumbling, but
now dying down, and the fading of the raging fireless and less,
until you could barely make it out in the vast white expanse of
sky. Then it was gone and the thunder dropped, lessened and
disappeared altogether... It was thereand flew away...[author's
emphasis in bold]
TheOlonkhoEpic
Scattering a blizzard of stone,Causing lightning to
flash,Causing a four-fold thunder to crashBehind him,Niurgun Bootur
flew unswerving...
A careful study of theOlonkhoprompts an important conclusion.
Some elements of the epos describe a pattern that precisely
reflects the phases in the development of events that periodically
occur above the Siberian tundra. It becomes clear why
theOlonkhotexts contain such amazing echoes of the eyewitness
accounts. Here are some more lines from theOlonkho:
At a distance of three days' journeyYou can see the smoke
rising,Spreading out above like a mushroom.The land around grew
coveredWith dust and ash.The smoke swirled,Thick and black,Rose to
the sky in a dark cloud,Obscuring the sunlight.
At different times this scenario has been witnessed by thousands
of people. Among the more interesting accounts of this nature is a
report by the Dutch Ambassador, Baron de Bij, which I. V. Bogatyrev
found in the State Naval Archive of the USSR:
On 2 (13) April 1716, on the second day after the Easter
festival, around 9 in the evening there appeared in a pure,
cloudless sky a most brilliant meteor, the gradual development of
which is attached hereto.In the northeastern part of the sky there
rose first from the horizon a very dense cloud, pointed towards the
top and broad at the base. It rose so quickly that in no more than
three minutes it reached half the height to the zenith.At the very
moment when the dark cloud appeared, in the northwest there
appeared a huge shining comet that rose to 12 above the horizon,
and then from the north another dark cloud arose, from the west,
rapidly rising to the cloud that approached it somewhat slower.
Between these two clouds in the northeast a bright light formed in
the shape of a column, that for several minutes did not change its
position, while the cloud that appeared from the west moved to meet
it with exceptional speed and collided with the other cloud with
such terrible force that [there was] a broad flame in the sky from
their collision and [this] was accompanied by smoke, while the glow
extended from the northeast right to the west. The real smoke
ascended to 20 above the horizon, while the rays of flame
intersected it constantly in all directions, just as if there was a
battle taking place between many navies and armies.This prodigy
continued for a full quarter of an hour in its most dazzling form
and then began to dim little by little and finished with the
appearance of a host of bright arrows that reached to 80 above the
horizon. The cloud that had appeared in the east dispersed. After
it, the other vanished completely, so that by 10 in the evening the
sky had again become clear and shone with glistening stars.One
cannot imagine how terrifying this phenomenon was at the moment
when the two clouds collided, when they both shattered, as it were,
from the mighty blow, and when they were also accompanied with
exceptional speed by a host of small clouds headed westwards. The
flame that flew from them was like claps of thunder, exceptionally
bright and dazzling.
High-Tech Genius behind the Installation
Analysing the consequences of the explosions that have taken
place above the Siberian taiga in the past 100 years, you get a
heart-wrenching sense of gratitude and awe towards the intellectual
power of those who, thousands of years ago, built a complex to
defend our beautiful blue planet and all her inhabitants. Even the
first blow, struck when a meteorite is still many kilometres above
the Earth, causes enough of a deflection in its flight path to
shift all that subsequently occurs, and all the consequences of the
explosions that destroy the meteorite take place away from densely
populated places to a less dangerous area!
Let us return to 30 June 1908 and view all that took place
through the eyes of witnesses. The whole observed event developed
according to roughly this pattern. Around 7.15 am, the meteorite
was moving on a trajectory from southeast to northwest. In
Preobrazhenka, I. M. Volozhin saw moving across the sky "a belt of
smoke with fire flashing from it". That was the meteorite hurtling
down to Earth.
1. The Generation and Release of the "Terminator Spheres"
People in the area of Kirensk reported:
...a fiery pillar appeared to the northwest, about four sagens
[approx. 6 metres] in diameter in the shape of a spear. When the
pillar disappeared, five strong brief bangs were heard, like
cannon-shots following quickly and distinctly one after another
From the Teteria trading post, "pillars of fire" were seen in
the north. "Pillars of fire" were also observed in other places
(Kezhma, Nizhne-Ilimsk, Vitim) that do not lie on a single
line.
2. A Red Glow during the Generation of the Spheres before the
Explosion
The emergence of the terminators at the surface is the most
energy-intensive phase, causing the "energy pillars" and
"terminators" to give off a bright white light, like that produced
in welding. The intensity of the light was such that observers got
the impression that everything had faded or grown dark. Then, after
the emergence of a "terminator", the energy level of the process
changed (decreased) so that the "energy pillars" and "terminators"
turned red, lighting up the area of the coming explosion. Maxim
Kainachenok, a 50-year-old Evenk questioned in Vanavara, said:
...My parents had stopped on the Segochamba. There the earth
shook and there was thunder. At first the redness appeared, and
then thunder. The redness was away from Vanavara. At the moment the
meteorite fell, Uncle Axenov went out to look after the reindeer
and he said that, first, everything above the site of the explosion
went black, then red, and after that they heard thunder...
Anna Yelkina, a 75-year-old Evenk woman living in Vanavara,
confirmed this:
Early, early in the morning...a little higher than the sun,
there was a crash of thunder. High, high up. The whole sky was red,
and not just the sky: everything around was redthe earth and the
sky. Then there was a mighty thundering. A sound like a bell, like
people beating a piece of iron. The thunder went on about half an
hour...
3. The Flights of the "Terminators"
Immediately after the appearance of the pillars of light
(energy), there appeared in the sky shining "terminator spheres"
that began flying towards the explosion site. Like many thousands
of others who were questioned, N. Ponomarev from the village of
Nizhne-Ilimsk reported:
At 7.20 am, a loud noise was heard near Nizhne-Ilimsk that
turned into peals of thunder... Some of the houses shook from the
blows. Many of the inhabitants saw that before the thunder crashed,
"some fiery body looking like a log" hurtled rapidly above the
ground from the south to the northwest. Immediately after that
there came the crash; and at the place where the fiery body had
vanished, "fire" appeared, and then "smoke"...
K. A. Kokorin, an inhabitant of the village of Kezhma, who was
questioned by Ye. L. Krinov in 1930, said:
Three or four days before St Peter's day, around 8 in the
morning, no later, I heard sounds like cannon-fire. I immediately
ran out into the yard that is open to the southwest and west. At
that time the sounds were still going on and I saw to the
southwest, at roughly half the height between the zenith and the
horizon, a red sphere flying; rainbow stripes were visible to the
sides and behind it.
At that same time in Kirensk, people were watching a fiery-red
ball to the northwest, moving horizontally according to some
accounts, dropping steeply according to others. By the Mursky
Rapids (close to the village of Boguchany) there was a flash of
bluish light, and a fiery body, considerably larger than the sun,
hurtled from the south leaving a broad, bright trail
4. The Interception of the Meteorite
The interception of the meteorite was accomplished by a
"terminator" striking it from above to reduce its original speed
sharply. This released a colossal amount of energy that, combined
with the energy of the "terminator", literally melted the substance
of the meteorite.In the correspondent's report by S. Kulesh,
published in the Irkutsk-based newspaperSibiron 2 July (old style)
1908, we read:
On the morning of 17 (30) June in the village of
Nizhne-Kerelinskoye (some 200 versts [215 km] north of Kirensk) the
peasants saw to the north-west, quite high above the horizon, some
body glowing with a bluish-white light of exceptional strength (you
could not keep your eyes on it), moving downwards for ten
minutes... Having approached the ground (forest), the glowing body
seemed to melt. An immense cloud of black smoke formed in its place
and an exceptionally loud noise (not thunder) was heard, as if of
falling stones or cannon-fire. All the buildings shook. At the same
time, flame of indeterminate shape began to burst from the
cloud...
Here is the account of S. B. Semionov, who was in the village of
Vanavara, 100 kilometres from the disaster site:
...Suddenly, to the north, the sky spilt apart and in it fire
appeared, broad and high above the trees, encompassing the whole
northern part of the sky. At that point I felt as hot as if my
shirt had caught fire on me. I wanted to shout out and tear my
shirt off, but at that moment [the sky] slammed shut and there was
a tremendous bang. I was hurled about three sagens across the
ground. At the moment when the sky opened, past the houses tore a
hot wind, as if from a cannon, leaving marks on the ground in the
form of tracks and damaging the full-grown onions. Then it turned
out that many panes had been broken in the windows and the iron
hasp on the barn door was broken...
P. P. Kosolapov, who was right by Semionov at the time, felt his
ears burning, although he did not notice any light phenomena. Fifty
kilometres from the explosion site, people's clothing smouldered
from the unbearable heat that suddenly flooded over them from
somewhere in the cold taiga. Sixty kilometres away, no-one could
keep on their feet. Six hundred kilometres away, the flash outshone
the sun.
Compensatory Explosive Forces
The local inhabitants questioned by scientists investigating the
Tunguska explosion asserted that an instant before the terrible
flash, in places trees, yurts (nomadic dwellings) and sections of
soil from the hills were swept into the air, while in the rivers
the waves ran against the current. These observations are a direct
indication that what took place was a vacuum implosion, sucking
everything towards its centre, while at the same time it had a
component operating in the opposite direction, since the trees at
the epicentres of the blasts fell outwards from the centre. This
difference in directions points to the use of a technology for
compensating explosive forces! The testimony of a number of
witnesses builds into a picture of a well-ordered distribution of
pressure from the blast wave.The research materials and interviews
contain a considerable number of facts that specialists have failed
to noteindications, for example, that the jolts, noise and flash
that accompanied the explosions were described by witnesses either
as terrible or as insignificant (barely noticeable), although the
settlements and people from whom we have these accounts were only a
small distance apart.
Diagram from the periodicalTekhnika i Molodezh(no. 1, 1984),
showing the location of witnesses and the trajectories of
"terminator spheres" taken for the meteorite as reported to
researchers Suslov (1), Astapovich (2), Krinov (3), Konenkin (4)
and Fast (6). Number 5 indicates the trajectory determined by the
expeditions that visited the blast site on the basis of the
direction of the fallen trees.
There are accounts from a number of witnesses who were
relatively close to the explosion site, asserting that they did not
notice any powerful blasts at all and felt no earth tremors, while
in some settlements over 600 kilometres from the epicentre the
houses shook, window panes shattered and the walls of stoves
cracked!In other words, the main blast wave of the explosion was
somehow compensated in such a way that the fewest people suffered,
although it proved impossible to avoid casualties among animals
(thousands of reindeer perished) and people. Not everyone had
heeded the shamans' warnings and left the danger area.This was not
the first time that the researchers had come across the use of a
technology for compensating explosive forces. The processes and
consequences of the Tunguska explosion bear a certain similarity to
the explosion that took place on 12 April 1991 in Sasovo, some 500
kilometres south of Moscow. Detailed research has shown that in
both cases the main force of the blast wave and the consequences of
explosions of tremendous scale and power were shifted into a
different space (dimension)!A specific indicator of the use of the
technology for compensating explosive forces is a characteristic
sound preceding and completing the stage of the main blast. In both
the Tunguska and Sasovo explosions (the latter left a gigantic
crater, 28 x 3.5 metres, right in the centre of the town), the
crash of the explosion itself was preceded and then turned again
into a sound that a witness to the Tunguska explosion described as
"similar to the sound of the wind, that went from north to south".
Others spoke of it as being like the noise a three-inch shell makes
in the air. Note that this sound preceded the explosion and then
reappeared after ita sound as if something was flying away from the
disaster site. In the Sasovo incident, witnesses described the
effect as the sound of a jet aircraft falling or flying away!Here
is the account of a woman named Nikitina who worked at the Sasovo
railroad station:
Suddenly there was a growing roar; the walls of the lookout
tower, where I was at the time, shook. Then came an explosion of
monstrous force. The window panes fell shattered to the
floor...
Witnesses describe a noise then going away from them.Overall, we
get the following sequence of events:
a growing roar (noise);
a powerful explosion;
a bang like an aircraft going through the sound barrier and a
diminishing roar (a noise like a jet flying away from the
observer).
The use of compensatory technology unequivocally suggests the
involvement of intelligent forces directing all that happened. If
this had not been the case, the consequences of the explosions
would have been far more terrible and devastating, probably costing
the lives of thousands upon thousands of unsuspecting people!The
first blow was struck downwards on the Tunguska meteorite by a
terminator that had been awaiting it and caught the meteorite at a
height of about 10,000 metres. The explosion was accompanied by a
blinding flash that caused radiation burns to vegetation and a fire
in a zone 25 kilometres in radius.
The first blow was struck downwards on the Tunguska meteorite by
a terminator that had been awaiting it and caught the meteorite at
a height of about 10,000 metres. The explosion was accompanied by a
blinding flash that caused radiation burns to vegetation and a fire
in a zone 25 kilometres in radius.
Time-space Distortions
The gigantic electromagnetic discharge that occurred at the
moment of this terminator's impact caused a remagnetisation of the
soils, producing an extremely strong effect on the environment and
the space-time structure of the blast siteleading to a change in
the flow of physical time that, decades later, was observed by
scientific expeditions in the area. The distortion of time-space by
means of a powerful electromagnetic discharge is a component of the
compensatory technology!If we take into account the use of this
same electromagnetic field by UFOs to distort the structure of
time-space in order to shift into different dimensions, then
various characteristic features of the accounts given by Tunguska
witnesses enable us to take a new look at the events in question,
revealing fascinating details that have hitherto escaped the
attention of researchers.Here is the story of Ivan Kurkagyr, the
son of a Tunguska witness. It contains a curious account of how, at
the moment of the blasta powerful electromagnetic discharge that
caused a distortion of shapesome people and animals were
instantaneously shifted to different places. In other words, they
were transferred in space!
Many tents stood together. In the morning, thunder could be
heard. An incredibly noisy storm broke. It smashed the tents,
carried people through the air. People found themselves away in the
marsh. They could not understand...how they had been taken over
there. The storm that set fire to the taiga also consumed their
reindeer. Fire spread. One man's tent stood there. This fellow
wanted to go home. He had money in his tursuk [felt bag]. Seeing
the fire, he dashed to take the money. He ran to the river, towards
the tents. The fire was eating the tents [of his neighbours]. The
people threw themselves into the river. The fire passed across the
water. Those in the river caught alight. They dived, but the fire
set alight even the divers, burning their heads. In that way they
all died...
There is one more indicator of a powerful effect on the
time-space structure in the blast area. At the moment of the
explosion, the sky somehow opened and people could see outer
spacethe starry firmamentbeyond!A. S. Kosolapova, the daughter of
S. B. Semionov, said when questioned by Krinov in 1930:
I was 19 years old and at the time of the meteorite fall I was
at the Vanavara trading post. Marfa Briukhanova and I had gone to
the spring for water. Marfa began drawing water and I stood by her,
facing north. At that moment, I saw in front of me to the north the
sky open to the very earth and a burst of fire. We were scared and
I only managed to say, "Why has the sky opened in daytime? I've
heard of the sky opening at night, but never during the day", when
the sky closed again and after that we heard bangs, like
shots...
At the time of the first strike, several terminator spheres were
waiting in the area, hanging in one place and searing the tops of
the trees and other vegetation with their high-frequency energy. In
these final minutes before the culminating event, several more
terminators rushed to the area (which was later named after
Kulik).Many who saw the fiery spheres fly across the sky said that
their movement was accompanied by a dazzlingly bright light and
strong heat radiation. Note how this event appeared to the admiring
teller of theOlonkho:
Kiun ErbiieUncatchable in flight,Shadowless,The fast
heraldmessenger of the heavenly Dyesegei,Glittering in his
mail,Flying faster than the lightning bolts,
Kium Erbiie the champion.He flew,A falling star,Only the air
whistled behind him...He flew like an arrowBeyond the bounds
Of the western yellow skies,To the lower steep slopeOf the
heavens hanging above the abyss.He flew at a heightOnly the thunder
pealedA blue fire blazed behind him,
A white fire raged in his wake,Red sparks hovered in a swarm,A
glow flared in the clouds...
It is a remarkable fact that "the bounds of the western yellow
skies" means precisely the area of the Podkamennaya Tunguska!
Meteorite Fragments
In order to picture the subsequent course of events, you need to
have a precise idea of the relationships between the height of the
first explosion (10,000 metres above the ground), the size of the
areas of uprooted trees (many times larger than height) and the
distance (hundreds of kilometres) that the pieces of the fragmented
meteorite flew. (The interval between the explosions is the time
taken for the remnants to fly from one blast area to another.)Above
the Shishkov blast area, the meteorite had broken into several
parts. The fragments scattered in different directions, but
terminator spheres bearing down from different sides caught and
destroyed them. This is the reason why, on the one hand, in the
areas of uprooted trees researchers have found several epicentres
marked by trunks felled in different directions, while, on the
other hand, all the witnesses spoke of hearing first a terribly
powerful explosion (the fragmentation) and then, over the course of
five to six minutes, something like an artillery cannonade (the
"mopping-up" of the small pieces).
After the terminator hit the meteorite above the Shishkov site,
large pieces of the surviving meteorite substance continued by
inertia to move along the original trajectory to the area of the
Kulik blast site. Having lost speed and energy, the fragments
covered the distance of 120 to 150 kilometres in about 15 minutes
(the speed of a jet aircraft), after which there was a second
powerful explosion. The terminators that flew into this area struck
the fragments coming from the Shishkov site.Yegor Ankudinov, an
inhabitant of the village of Berezovo in Nizhne-Ilimsk district,
Irkutsk region, was with his father and uncle at the time, felling
pines in the forest to make a house. He recalled:
It was a beautiful day. We had just had breakfast and begun
cutting wood. Suddenly there was a bang from somewhere close by.
The ground started shaking and dry branches fell off the trees.
Then, a little later, there was another thunderclap: the same, only
far, far away, somewhere off to the north...
TheKrasnoyaretsnewspaper of 13 July 1908 reported:
Kezhemskoye village. On 17th (30th) at 7 am, a noise was heard
as if a strong wind was blowing. Immediately afterwards there was a
terrible bang, accompanied by an earth tremor that caused the
buildings to literally shake and giving the impression that the
building had been delivered a powerful blow by some huge log or
heavy stone. The first blow was followed by a second, equally
strong, then a third. In the interval between the first and second
there was an unusual subterranean rumbling, like the sound rails
might make if 10 trains were running on them at once. Then for 56
minutes there was something exactly like artillery fire: some 5060
bangs at short, almost identical, intervals. Gradually the last
bangs grew weaker. One and a half or two minutes after the end of
the continuous "firing", six more bangs were heard, one after
another, resembling distant cannon-shots but still distinctly
audible and tangible by the shaking of the ground...
The gigantic plasma spheres crashed into the meteorite
fragments, releasing a colossal amount of energy in order to
destroy the cosmic intruder with all its contents. When we came to
assess the probability of a large number of small fragments being
produced by the smashing of the meteorite, the suggestion was put
forward that the terminators' electromagnetic charge possessed a
specific property. The vector (charge) of a terminator's magnetic
field forced all the small remnants to become magnetically attached
to it, and then everything was destroyed by the energy of the next
explosion.
The direction of the fallen tree trunks at the epicentre of the
explosion.
It is possible that above the Shishkov (zone 1) or Kulik (zone
2) sites, two large pieces detached from the meteorite by the
explosion were thrown 100 kilometres to the right (zones 4 and
5)where terminators caught up with them and literally reduced them
to dust. The energy of the "terminator spheres" was so powerful
that apart from electromagnetic radiation between the Earth and the
"terminators" there were also powerful electrical discharges
(lightning).Take this eyewitness account. On the morning of 30
June, the brothers Chuchancha and Chekaren from the Shaniagir clan
were sleeping in their tent which was pitched alongside the River
Avarkitty. They were awoken by powerful tremors and a loud
whistling of the wind:
Chekaren and I climbed out of our bags and were on the point of
scrambling out of the tent, when suddenly there was a very powerful
thunderclap. That was the first bang. The ground began jumping and
shaking; a mighty wind struck our tent and knocked it over Then I
saw a terrible wonder: the trunks of the trees falling, the needles
burning on them, the dry brushwood burning, the reindeer moss
burning. There was smoke everywhere; our eyes were sore. It was
very hot, hot enough to burn to death. Suddenly, above the hill
where the forest had already fallen, it became very bright and...as
if another sun had appeared...it hurt your eyes and I even closed
mine. And immediately there was a mighty thunderclap. That was the
second bang. It was a sunny morning, cloudless. Our sun was shining
brightly, as always, and here this second sun appeared!
After that we saw, apparently somewhere up above but in a
different place, there was another flash and again a mighty crash.
That was the third bang. A wind struck us, knocked us off our feet,
struck the felled tree trunks.
We watched the falling trees, saw how their tops broke and
looked at the fire. Suddenly Chekaren shouted, "Look up!" and
pointed. I looked and saw a bolt of lightning. It flashed and again
struck, making a great thunderclap. But the crash was a little less
than before. That was the fourth bang, like ordinary thunder... Now
it's come back to me that there was one more bang, a fifth, but it
was little and somewhere far off...
Later researchers noted that the closer they got to the
epicentre, the more trees they found which had been struck by
lightning. At the epicentre, there are places where 80 per cent of
the trees have suffered lightning strikes. This is also confirmed
by the discoveries made by scientists from Novosibirsk who proved
that the initial uprooting of trees was caused by a radial blast.
They concluded that a body had exploded whose linear dimensions
were no more than a few dozen metres and that it was only
subsequent explosions that muddied the picture of the original
radial event.
Specialists have assessed that the electrical discharges rent
the air for between two and 15 minutes, creating the aural
impression of artillery fire, while all that time their source
remained above the epicentre and was not moving with gigantic
speed. In other words, the body arrived, stopped and affected the
locality below it in a host of ways, e.g., with radiation, temporal
distortions, mutationsThe bulk of the Tunguska meteorite was
destroyed above the Kulik site, but one piece "escaped" and flew on
another 120 kilometres before falling to earth. The methodical
destruction of everything that belonged to the meteorite would
suggest it was carrying some sort of bacteria or viruses dangerous
to life on Earth. Therefore, one of the terminators plunged into
the ground, and on the ground finished off the remnants of the
Tunguska meteorite, causing a powerful earthquake. The result was a
gigantic crater at the final landing place of the meteoritea hole
200 metres in diameter and 20 metres deep, which was later named
"Voronov's crater".Vakulin, the head of the Nizhne-Ilimsk postal
department, reported in a letter dated 28 July 1908:
On Tuesday 17 June, around 8 am (clocks not checked), according
to a large number of local inhabitants they first noticed to the
northwest a fireball descending at an angle to the horizon from
east to west, which as it approached the ground turned into a
pillar of fire and instantly vanished. After its disappearance, a
cloud of smoke could be seen rising from the ground in that
direction.After a few minutes, there was a loud noise in the air
with distant dull reports like peals of thunder. These bangs were
followed by eight loud bangs, like artillery shots. The very last
bang was accompanied by a whistling and was especially powerful,
causing the ground and buildings to shake...
Some witnesses stated that the bang made people fall down; many
lost consciousness and did not recover it for days. The blast
knocked horses to their knees, but they did not boltindicating that
the animals were badly scared. In some places, cracks appeared in
the ground.Further support for the idea that the destroyed
meteorite was carrying dangerous micro-organisms is the evidence
that after its destruction the Installation scanned the Earth's
surface for remnants of meteorite matter. The dazed witnesses
reported observing terminators flying above the crash site until
the evening of 30 June! These terminator spheresor "secondary
meteors", as they have been interpreted by researcherswere seen by
about half of all observers.
Microspherules From The Tunguska Explosion
Indirectly pointing in the same direction is the chemical
composition of the microspherules found in the peat at the disaster
site. These are unusual for meteoroids and are particularly rich in
alkaline elements. Reasoning about the mechanism by which the
terminators operate, we can assume that with their powerful
electromagnetic charge they were supposed to attach themselves to a
flying meteorite and alter its trajectory so that it passed out of
the Earth's atmosphere. If the meteorite's trajectory was such as
to make deflection impossible, the terminators simply destroyed the
rocky splintersliterally melting the meteoritic substance, which
subsequently hardened into tiny spherules.Numerous soil samples
taken at different distances from the destruction site have yielded
magnetite spherules containing up to 10% nickel, which supports the
idea that they came from space. Besides magnetite, silicate spheres
have also been found. They range in size from 5 to 400 microns. The
magnetite particles display a great variety of shapes and different
surface characteristics. Besides the predominantly spherical
formations, one can also find drop-shaped particles that were
produced by the spattering of molten meteoritic substance under the
influence of the colossal temperatures produced by the actions of
the terminators. Some spherules have a shiny surface; others have a
matte, grainy and even finely porous surface, which is due in part
to the meteoritic substance vaporising when the matter was viscous.
Often the spheres are hollow with a slag-like look to the inside.
Sometimes one comes across conglomerations of magnetite and
silicate spheres, indicating that they were formed at the same time
and pointing to the complex composition of the Tunguska meteorite
associated with the genesis of these spherules.Work carried out in
196162 established that there is a certain pattern to the
distribution of these spherules on the surface. The greatest
concentration of them is found in a strip 50 to 60 kilometres wide,
extending northwestwards from the epicentre of the meteorite
explosion and which can be traced for over 250 kilometres.In the
disaster region, covering an area with a radius of about 130
kilometres from its centre at the Kulik site, there are three
identifiable zones of peat enriched with microspherules. The first,
with a thin sickle shape, curves around the epicentre. The second
reflects the movement of the bolide in the region of zones 4 and 5,
to the east and northeast of the Kulik site in the upper reaches of
the Southern Chunia River and thus coincides with the start of the
disintegration of the meteorite. The third zone, very large and
amorphous, is located precisely in the region of Voronov's crater.
It is no coincidence that the microspherules in this area display
certain peculiarities of structure and formation that set them
apart from those in the other zones, as the destruction of the
meteorite took place directly in the ground and so material from
the soil became mixed with meteoritic matter during
vaporisation.The bolide was completely vaporised by the explosion,
and the products of that process were scattered in the form of
extremely fine spheres over an area of 15,000 square kilometres.
Their combined mass is estimated at around 10 tonnes. It is for
this reason that all the expeditions that visited the area of the
explosion found nothing of the meteorite itself, apart from a
dusting of silicate and magnetite spherules that the blast wave
spread across the entire Earth.The Olonkho epic and surviving
legends tell us that several decades after the epic flight of
Niurgun Bootur, Kiun Erbiie ("the gleaming aerial messenger") took
to the air, heralding the appearance of Uot Usumu Tong Duurai. This
suggests that the Tunguska explosion is identified as Niurgun
Bootur.
The 1984 Chulym Explosion
Decades passed, and then on 26 February 1984 a meteor crossed
the sky of western and eastern Siberia at a height of roughly 100
kilometres, precisely following the trajectory of the 1908 Tunguska
body. At that time, passengers in a bus observed from an elevated
section of the Mirny highway far to the north a thin "pillar of
fire" extending from the ground to the sky that then began to
undergo various geometrical metamorphoses. The sight lasted several
minutes. It was red in colour.Fishermen in the area of the River
Chona observed rising into the air from the hills to the north (the
"Valley of Death" region) two enormous, shining spheres that,
gradually picking up speed, soared vertically upwards and
disappeared behind the clouds. The whole event took several
minutes, after which time the clouds continued to glow for a while.
Then, without reaching the ground, the bolide exploded in a shower
of sparks in the area of the River Chulym.An expedition dispatched
to that area found, as with the Tunguska event, no traces of
meteoritic material apart from magnetite and silicate spherules.
They discovered no large-scale uprooting of trees, as the explosion
took place at great height.To all appearances, this was Kiun
Erbiie, the herald of Uot Usumu Tong Duurai, and so by the start of
the new millennium the researchers were in a fervour of
expectation.
The 2002 Vitim Meteorite
If the ancient legends are to be believed, the emergence of Uot
Usumu Tong Duurai is always accompanied by terrible destruction.
Expeditions to the Valley of Death area planned for the end of the
20th century and the beginning of this century were postponed
several times on account of reports from Siberia of animals
migrating away from their intended destination. The researchers
took the exodus of fauna as a direct indication of the complex's
energy plant having entered another active phase.What the
researchers both awaited and feared, because of the highly
unpleasant forecast contained in the Olonkho, took place in
September 2002. The first report of the flight of a space body came
from the American military. Drawing on data received from a
military satellite, the US Department of Defense distributed
information about a large meteorite falling in the area of Bodaibo
in the Irkutsk region of Russia. The satellite recorded the
appearance of a shining object at a height of 62 kilometres, moving
at an angle of 32 degrees to the horizon. Observation continued to
the point where a powerful explosion took place at a height of 30
kilometres. Preliminary calculations put the power of the explosion
at an equivalent of 200 tonnes of TNT.The first interviews with
witnesses to the Vitim meteorite explosion pointed to a parallel
with the Tunguska event in terms of phases of development. Despite
the fact that the night of 2425 September 2002 was overcasta low
10% cloud cover with rain, the lower edge of the clouds being at
1,100 to 1,200 metresthere was no difficulty in establishing the
sequence of events and spotting the obvious similarity to the
Tunguska event.In this case, everything followed the already
familiar pattern and began with the exodus of fauna. Hunters
questioned reported that animals left the area shortly before the
Vitim explosion.Thirty minutes before the explosion, the energy
complex began to enter its most active phase. It is noteworthy that
one of the witnesses questioned noticed that his dog became
agitated and began to whine half an hour before the explosion!
The Energy Pillar and the Red Glow
A few minutes before the first explosion, the complex began to
disgorge the "terminators". Here are some eyewitness
accounts.Yevgeny Yarygin was on duty at the electrical distribution
centre in the settlement of Muskovit:
...I was on duty in the switchboard room whose window faces
south. The weather was cloudy, rainy, and it was drizzling. We were
sitting and chatting. A glow appeared outside the window. Shadows
appeared. The light was coming from the window. Through the windows
we could see a bright hemispherical glow beginning to rise from
behind the hills to the southeast [at a bearing of roughly 160170
degrees; VU]. The light was white, like you get in welding. The
white light seemed to rise upwards and behind it the light began to
shift into the red and maroon [a red pillar was seen by the bus
passengers before the Chulym explosion, and also by witnesses to
the Tunguska explosionVU]. Little "rays" were visible above the
ascending hemisphere. The glow spread over the whole sky. The light
was even and unbroken; we could not see any flying objects. The
parting of the Yermikhi stream, above the watershed of which the
glow was rising, was brightly lit. Then everything began to dim and
went out. The glow lasted around 10 seconds.
I went out onto the landing outside, went to the fence and
opened the door. By then about 30 seconds had passed after the
disappearance of the glow. There was a penetrating report, an
explosion, a very sharp bang. It made your ears ring and even made
you weak at the knees. Plaster came down in the building.
Everything moved and shook. There was a single bang. That was at
seven minutes to two. But a distant noise had appeared even before
the beginning of the glowsomething like the roar from an aircraft
[witnesses to the Tunguska explosion compared this noise with a
three-inch shell in flightVU]. The sound came from the same quarter
as the glow, but the bang came from the opposite side, where the
glow had been heading. I heard that someone was sitting in an
armchair at home and the chair moved under them...
Victor Vedeshin, questioned by telephone on 22 October 2002,
said:
...I was on duty that night at the boat station. A strong wind
blew and at the same time a strong glow appeared in the sky. It was
white, with a greenish tinge to it, bright like a welding spark or
lightning, making your eyes hurt to look at it. Right then a
shining flying sphere appeared. It flew beyond the horizon in the
direction of Maximikhi...
Vitaly Valiuk, who worked at the town hall in Bodaibo,
noted:
Eight minutes to two in the morning. Dense cumulus clouds in the
sky. I was standing and smoking. Suddenly there was a flash. I
thought it was lightning. But the glow grew as if someone was
turning on one bulb after another. It became as bright as day. Some
object flew from the southwest to the northeast... You couldn't
tell if it was a sphere or not. It had a turquoise glow around it.
It was perhaps the size of the lunar disc. And it had a tail behind
it reddish like the sparks from a bonfire. The angle of fall was
about 60 degrees. The speed of the object was very high. While it
all flew past, I had time to finish my cigarette and 30 seconds
later there came a rumble, like a distant explosion...
Marina Kovaleva reported:
It was five to two. The light was strong. That light lasted a
few seconds, then everything turned pink, then it got darker and
darker and darker, becoming a reddish light. Then there was a
rumbling. You got the impression, well, I don't know, like
something below the groun