ANCIENT
CITY FOUND, IRRADIATED FROM ATOMIC BLAST Radiation
still so intense, the area is highly dangerous A heavy layer of radioactive
ash in Rajasthan, India, covers a three-square mile area, ten miles west of Jodhpur.
Scientists are investigating the site, where a housing development was being built.
For some time it has been established that there is a very high rate of birth
defects and cancer in the area under construction. The levels of radiation there
have registered so high on investigators' gauges that the Indian government has
now cordoned off the region.
Scientists have unearthed an ancient city
where evidence shows an atomic blast dating back thousands of years, destroyed
most of the buildings and probably a half-million people.
One researcher
estimates that the nuclear bomb used was about the size of the ones dropped on
Japan in 1945. The Mahabharata clearly describes a catastrophic blast
that rocked the continent. "A single projectile charged
with all the power in the Universe...An incandescent column of smoke and flame
as bright as 10,000 suns, rose in all its splendor...it was an unknown weapon,
an iron thunderbolt, a gigantic messenger of death which reduced to ashes an entire
race. "The corpses were so burned as to be unrecognizable. Their
hair and nails fell out, pottery broke without any apparent cause, and the birds
turned white. "After a few hours, all foodstuffs were infected.
To escape from this fire, the soldiers threw themselves into the river."
A HISTORIAN COMMENTS Historian Kisari
Mohan Ganguli says that Indian sacred writings are full of such descriptions,
which sound like an atomic blast as experienced in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He
says references mention fighting sky chariots and final weapons. An ancient battle
is described in the Drona Parva, a section of the Mahabharata. "The passage
tells of combat where explosions of final weapons decimate entire armies, causing
crowds of warriors with steeds and elephants and weapons to be carried away as
if they were dry leaves of trees," says Ganguli. "Instead of
mushroom clouds, the writer describes a perpendicular explosion with its billowing
smoke clouds as consecutive openings of giant parasols. There are comments about
the contamination of food and people's hair falling out." ARCHEOLOGICAL
INVESTIGATION PROVIDES INFORMATION Archeologist Francis Taylor
says that etchings in some nearby temples he has managed to translate suggest
that they prayed to be spared from the great light that was coming to lay ruin
to the city.
"It's so mid-boggling to imagine that some civilization had nuclear technology
before we did. The radioactive ash adds credibility to the ancient Indian records
that describe atomic warfare." Construction has halted while the
five member team conducts the investigation. The foreman of the project is Lee
Hundley, who pioneered the investigation after the high level of radiation was
discovered.
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From: dinesh khandelwal This file shared
with KeelyNet courtesy of Bryant Stavely. Excerpt from the World Island Review,
January 1992. Hosted By Astounding Ancients <br> http://all-ez.com/ancients.htm
http://www.archaeologyanswers/indusa.htm
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