download-U934 - The Anomalies Network
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download-U934 - The Anomalies Network
Vol 6 #3, Issue #22 Fall, 2008 $6.95 US/CAN Exploring Mysteries from Modern Times to Yesteryear. + Dr. Robert Schoch Discusses the Paranormal Searching for the God Particle Rhode island’s Mysterious Newport Tower THE REALITY BEHIND THE GARDEN OF EDEN PRESORT STANDARD US POSTAGE PAID PERMIT #581 BOLINGBROOK, IL Learn How to Cope, Evolve, and Expand in our Changing Universe! Clarisse Conner Clairvoyant Intuitive and Coast-to-Coast Radio Psychic For a reading, call (530) 877-3446 www.PsychicClarisseConner.com [email protected] By appointment only. I S S U E #22 F A L L , 2008 PUBLISHER, EDITOR, ART DIRECTOR Kim Guarnaccia: [email protected] A S S O C I AT E P U B L I S H E R Tim Swartz: [email protected] A S S I S TA N T E D I T O R AND EVENTS EDITOR Judith Kane: [email protected] ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Ellen McDaniel-Weissler: [email protected] f COLUMNISTS This Space Could Have Been Yours for Just $120! (based on a 2-year contract; b/w ad only) Kelly Bell Jaye Beldo Kenaz Filan Roy Stevenson Michael Newton Richard Mackenzie Charles Rammelkamp Carolyn Beavers Gonzales l F E AT U R E W R I T E R S Michael Ricciardi Mark S. Longo Michael Lohr Steve Taylor j REVIEWERS Jaye Beldo Sean Casteel g PROOFREADERS To place an ad, contact Kim Guarnaccia (603) 352-1645 [email protected] 2 Alma Dizon Jocelyn Comendul Published and printed in the United States of America. Mysteries Magazine, Volume 6 #3, Issue #22 is a publication of Phantom Press Publications, ISSN #1537-2928, and published four times a year in the U.S. and Canada. Copyright © 2008 Phantom Press Publications, PO Box 490, Walpole, NH 03608 USA. All rights reserved. No work may be copied or reproduced without the express permission of the editor. Correspondence should be addressed to: Kim Guarnaccia, Editor, Mysteries Magazine, PO Box 490, Walpole, NH 03608 USA, email: [email protected], web: www.MysteriesMagazine.com or call (603) 352-1645. M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM 3 Contributors Steve Taylor lives in Manchester, England and is the author of The Fall: the Insanity of the Ego in Human History and the Dawning of a New Era (O books). Colin Wilson has described the book as an “astonishing work” while Eckhart Tolle has described it as “a fascinating and important book, highly enlightening and readable.” For more information see www.stevenmtaylor.com Michael Lohr is a writer/journalist, university researcher, and professional treasure-hunter. He is a Fellow with the Mudlark Society of the British Museum in London and belongs to many adventuring groups. Michael Ricciardi is a poet/writer, naturalist, and teacher living in Seattle Washington. He is also an award-winning video artist, whose most recent video—My Name is HAM, an imagined memoir of the first chimpanzee in space—premiered in April at the Yuri's Night World Party for Space at NASA Ames Research Center. He is currently writing a children’s novel called The Wizard of Dreams. An avid historian, Mark S. Longo is the founder of www.TheOptionsInsider.com. Although the current financial crisis consumes most of his time, Mark looks forward to the day when he can return to Newport, RI to study this mysterious historical oddity called the Newport Tower. Caveat: The opinions of the contributors to Mysteries Magazine are not necessarily those of the editors of Mysteries Magazine. However, Mysteries Magazine welcomes helpful criticism or comments on any of the articles contained herein. Please note that we reserve the right to edit all submissions. We also may occasionally use photos and illustrations that have been placed in the public domain. As it is not always possible to identify the copyright holder, if you claim credit for something we have published, please let us know, so that we can acknowledge you in the following issue. 4 M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 If you are never going to die, you don’t need to read this book. W ithout the physical body, we begin our deceased experience near the earth and then move into increasingly energized levels, eventually either returning to God/Source or deciding on another lifetime on earth. What is most interesting, however, is that we continue after death with the same mind, personality, attitudes and spiritual awareness that we had in life. In Choices in the Afterlife, psychic medium Gretchen Vogel details our after-death processes of self-realization, assimilation, healing and progression, as well as describes what we all will experience once our life here on earth comes to an end. “A must-read for any spiritual truth-seeker…” —Kim Guarnaccia, editor, Mysteries Magazine $14.95. Available at www.HowSpiritWorks.com, or by calling 603-209-1032. Psychic readings also available! Take a Spiritual Journey In The Spirit Garden, author David Baker carries readers through his unusual life of psychic experiences and his failure to understand them. Faced with an amazing world of auras, ghosts, angels, and spirits, Baker is unable to ignore a fear that there is something severely wrong with him. About to give up, a spiritual vision saves his life and forces him in a new direction. Inspired by spirit and held together by faith, Baker slowly begins to take his life back in this touching and inspiring story. Available at your local bookstore, on www.amazon.com, or at www.DavidBakerSpiritMedium.com 6 M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 Mysteries Issue #22 November-December, 2008 Feature Articles 41 A MERICA ’ S O LDEST M YSTER Y : R HODE ISLAND ’ S N EWPORT T OWER By Mark S. Longo Newport, RI, has long been famous as the summer playground for the fabulously wealthy. But nestled amongst the luxurious mansions and the private yachts is a mysterious stone tower whose history has baffled historians for centuries. It is believed to be the oldest stone structure in America, though no one can say precisely when it was built. 46 WAS THERE A G OLDEN A GE ? H ISTORICAL P ROOF FOR THE G ARDEN OF EDEN By Steve Taylor Almost all of the ancient cultures of Europe, the Middle East, and Asia have myths which speak of an earlier time when life was easier and humans lived in harmony with nature and each other. Most historians believe that these myths are little more than fairy tales, perhaps the result of our need to idealize the past. However, there is now evidence that suggests that these myths may contain a kernel of historical truth, a kind of distant folk memory of an actual historical era. 52 T H E H IGGS B OSON AND THE S EEKING THE G OD P ARTICLE L ARGE H ADRON C OLLIDER : By Michael Ricciardi Tucked away in a sleepy Swiss village lies the Center for Nuclear Experimentation and Research, the site of the recently completed Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the world’s largest particle collider and perhaps the most complex machine ever built. The principle goal of the LHC is to reveal the so-called god particle: the Higgs Boson, which is about 120 times more massive than a proton, and gives mass to all other particles as they emerge from the primordial quantum field. 58 T H E P ARAPSYCHOLOGY R EVOLUTION A N I NTERVIEW WITH D R . R OBERT S CHOCH By Michael Lohr 7 "The best scientist is open to experience and begins with the idea that anything is possible." —Sci-fi author Ray Bradbury Columns LETTERS TO THE EDITOR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10 N O T E W O R T H Y . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14 MYSTERIES ON V I E W . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24 Seattle’s Museum of the Mysteries Draws Paranormal Buffs A R C H A E O L O G I C A L A N O M A L I E S . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .26 Mutually Assured Destruction: Has it Happened Before? TREASURES OF THE DEEP H A U N T E D H E R I TA G E . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .30 AR’s Haunted Crescent Hotel A R C A N E C U L T S . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32 The Sky Kingdom of Malaysia’s Ayah Pin: Heretic or Healer? FROM THE S K I E S . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34 Byrd and the UFOs of ‘47 C R Y P T O C O R R A L . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36 B O O K R E V I E W S . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .66 MUSIC REVIEWS IN THE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .71 T H E AT E R . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72 T H E C L A S S I F I L E S . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .74 A GLIMPSE 8 INTO THE U N K N O W N . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .76 M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 This Space Could Have Been Yours for Just $90! IRAQ WAR CASUALTY TOTALS AS OF OCTOBER 30, 2008 W e at Mysteries Magazine are dismayed that the U.S. government is no longer releasing casualty totals from the Iraq war, and that the mainstream media is not properly covering these totals either. So to rectify this oversight, we have decided to provide these totals to you on an ongoing basis until the war officially ends. U.S. MILITARY & COALITION Deaths (based on a 2-year contract; b/w ad only) Wounded 4,503 43,787 (approximate #) IRAQI To place an ad, contact Kim Guarnaccia (603) 352-1645 [email protected] Police/Military Reported Civilian Deaths 8,729 96,000 (approximate #) Total # of Deaths/Casualties 153,019 For more info, visit www.iraqbodycount.org and www.icasualties.org WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM 9 Letters to the Editor Ayahuasca Not a Drug but Medicine Hello Kim, just received issue #20 with the commentary on hallucinogenic drugs by Jaye Beldo. I do not know why Mysteries is promoting a lot of negative things about the drug. As a veteran of 20 ayahuasca ceremonies now, I take exception to your unproven, unsubstantiated allegations about it. These articles also failed to mention that the active substance in the drug DMT, is also produced by the human brain, and is speculated to be the source of our nocturnal dreams. Or that it is probably the oldest pharmaceutical compound on the planet. Ayahuasca is not addictive. In fact, it is utilized in Peru as part of treatment for drug/alcohol addictions! Ayahuasca ceremonies are serious business, and preparations involve diet, fasting, and sexual abstinence. There may be people who will take it for a lark, but I doubt they would try it a second time. The foolish and irresponsible aside, it is not for everyone, but I can say that I have profound respect for anyone with the courage to utilize it in their spiritual path. As an agent of profound change in humans, it truly has no equal. I —TIM JACKSON EMAIL Vampires Real! Dear Kim, n an article entitled Michelle Belanger’s Life as a Psychic Vampire in issue #20, the author implies that the vampire of myth and legend is an archetypal personification of humanity’s fear of the hungry dead. My friend Jackson Grimes, however, would dispute this statement, as he says he has met real vampires. Allegedly, Mr. Grimes was staying at the home of his friend, Anton La Vey, for an extended period when he was intro- I 10 T his is a 40-foot mimetolith face of King Arthur holding Excalibur, located 3,800 ft above sea level on Sharp Top mountain, part of the Blue Ridge Mountain National Park, in Bedford, VA. Daniel Pillsbury found it in the summer of 1993 during a remote viewing journey while living on the south side of the mountain. He believes it is an ancient sacred site imbued with history, mystery, and intrigue, but long forgotten. For more information, photos, or participation in solving the mystery, go to www.facemountain.com or e-mail [email protected]. M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 Letters to the Editor duced to a man who was supposedly the head of a vampire sect. Even though he looked like a man of about 60, he swore he had come to the New World in the days of the wooden sailing ships. It seems in spite of the taboos against race-mixing, he got friendly with an Indian maiden who made him what he was today. According to his account, the human host is inhabited by a demon that buddies up in the body with the original spirit. By some undescribed means, the demonic companion is capable of slowing down the rate at which the host’s body ages, so it ages one year in nine. This, I assume, is why it needs to feed on the blood of living victims. —HEATHER GOLDSMITH EMAIL Remote Viewing Article Incomplete Dear Ms. Guarnaccia; have just recently read “Psi Spies The History of Remote Viewing” in issue #21. Though I find your information on the British involvement in RV intriguing, the article of its history is redundant and incomplete. Because Ingo Swann’s first RV data originally had no verified comparison, a second series of experiments were conducted at ASPR. It was this second series that helped to verify Swann’s original RV data. One of the participants in the second series was Keith Harary, who later joined SRI, when the lab experiments were on the verge of falling apart, due to conflicts between Swann and Patrick Price. Harary would redefine the RV process with another protocol called Extended Remote Viewing or “ERV,” but the alleged resentment of Harary from the other SRI team-members took its toll, and Harary would receive little recognition for his efforts. Meanwhile, another participant from the ASPR second series would also break new ground: A. Edward Moch. What I 12 Swann and Co. would be with military applications, Moch would be with the domestic applications of RV, such as with law enforcement. In the movie Suspect Zero starring Ben Kingsley, there is a truthful dialog between RV agent O’Brian (played by Kingsley), and an FBI Special Agent (played by Echardt) about O’Brian’s involvement with Project Icaris (aka Project Stargate). The Paramount Pictures press kit stated that former military RV participant Edward A. Dames was the consultant for the movie (A. Edward Moch... Edward A. Dames). It is claimed that the studio got both of their names mixed up, with Dames becoming the consultant for Suspect Zero, but his student associate M. Donahue later complained that “he was used” by Dames in the movie. The reality is the original movie script was rewritten with RV material that was originally inspired by A. Edward Moch! Both Harary and Moch were the youngest participants tested in RV as teenagers. In fact, if it wasn’t for Harary, Moch, and the other participants in the ASPR second series, there would probably be no Project Stargate as we know it or even an Ingo Swann. —A. EDWARD MOCH Independence Day Sighting Dear Kim, n Friday, July 4, right after the fireworks display in our neighborhood had ended at about 9:20 p.m., I was about to go inside when I saw a bright steak of light. Looking up, I saw a large orange blending light and could see a craft rotating slowly straight above me, with red lights around its rim and a domed top. I watched it for about three minutes before it moved to the right, then to the left, then rose straight up and then it was gone! The next day at the local flea market everyone was talking about the UFO; it appears that at least 20 people there had seen it besides myself. Now I am watching the skies more often. O —JEAN BEDNAREK EYNON, PA Email your editorial comments, stories, and critiques to [email protected], or write to: Kim Guarnaccia, Editor, Mysteries Magazine, PO Box 490, Walpole, NH 03608 USA. We reserve the right to edit any letter published. EMAIL Mea Culpa… Thanks to a dedicated reader, we were notified that we used the wrong photo to represent Robert Monroe in the Psi Spies article in issue #21. (Ronald Russell, the author of Monroe’s biography, is the person who was mistakenly identified as Bob Monroe.) Here is a photo of the real Robert Monroe. Our apologies! —KIM GUARNACCIA EDITOR M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 The Best in Back Issues! issue #1 issue #2 issue #3 issue #4 issue #5 issue #7 issue #8 issue #9 issue #10 issue #11 r3 Orde back E ore or m s for FREy a issueority 5-d ! Pri ipping sh issue #6 issue #12 Yes, I wish to order back issues! Name Street City/State/Zip issue #13 issue #14 issue #15 I Back issue ______________ $9 ............................. I Back issue ______________ $9 ............................. I Back issue ______________ $9 I Back issue ______________ $9 ............................. ............................. I Back issue ______________ $9 ............................. I Back issue ______________ $9 ............................. Discounts (order 4+ and take 10% off!): ............................ Canadian/Overseas Shipping Fee: ............................ Payment issue #16 issue #17 issue #18 Total Enclosed: ............................ I Check or money order enclosed Bill my: I Visa I MasterCard I Discover I AmEx Card # Expiration Date Signature issue #19 issue #20 issue #21 Mail order form and make check payable to Mysteries Magazine, PO Box 490, Walpole, NH 03608 USA Canadian/overseas orders, add $4 per issue for extra shipping costs. Noteworthy Revealing Stonehenge Guardians Fought To The Death rchaeologists are claiming that Stonehenge may have been the site of ritual battles to the death, which would explain why recently discovered male remains from the 2.300 BC, buried with arrows and a bronze axe, were from Switzerland, not Britain. Archaeologist Dennis Price says skeletons found at or close to Stonehenge have often been found buried with weapons, suggesting that those buried close to the mysterious monument were warriors who died violent deaths or who led lives of ritual fighting. According to researchers, there is firm evidence of a long-standing tradition of sentinels at Stonehenge going back to when it was originally built in 2,600 BC. But their function may have been more than just symbolic guards of the temple; these warriors may have been part of a complex social system in which they could only be replaced by someone who defeated them in combat. A 14 Lost Altar Stone Found rchaeologist Dennis Price thinks that he has tracked down a lost altar stone that was once an integral part of the rituals at Stonehenge. The distinctively shaped stone was described by Inigo Jones, a prominent 17thcentury architect who carried out the first known detailed study of the prehistoric site in 1620. It was also shown in a Victorian woodcut of Stonehenge and supposedly moved to somewhere called St. James during the Victorian era. Researchers long thought that the account referred to the Palace of St. James, but no such stone could be found there. Price believes that the stone now stands in two pieces in the Wiltshire village of Berwick St. James, just a few miles from Stonehenge. The two stones were used in Victorian times to bridge a small stream and they now stand on either side of a small lane in the tiny village. They are made of Jurassic limestone, which is found in Dorset and the Cotswolds, but not in the area surrounding Stonehenge. If put together, the pieces would look remarkably similar to the lost altar stone shown in the Victorian woodcut. A —JUDITH KANE —MICHAEL LOHR SOURCES: ASIAN NEWS INTL., SOURCE: LONDON TIMES SALISBURY JOURNAL, GAZETTE & HERALD M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 Getting Your Manuscript Published Will Never Be Easier. You Write it, I Perfect it. K im Guarnaccia is now pleased to offer her ed- iting experience to both experienced and novice writers. Editor and publisher of Mysteries Magazine—and editor and art director of Renaissance Magazine for the past 12 years—Kim can edit your manuscript for both grammar and clarity of message so that you can more easily get an article accepted by a prestigious magazine or your book accepted by an established literary agent or publisher. And if you plan to self-publish your work, Kim can also professionally design your book for you. Although she can edit any type of manuscript, Kim specializes in: • New Age/Spiritual Topics • Paranormal Topics • History • Both Nonfiction and Fiction Call Kim at (603) 352-1645 or email [email protected] for pricing and further information. WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM 15 Noteworthy Albino Killings in Tanzania Worry Officials A t least 19 albinos, including children, have been killed in Tanzania since the start of the year, their bodies mutilated in order to harvest their organs. Addressing the African nation, Tanzania’s President Jakaya Kikwete has denounced the horrific trend of targeting albinos for murders. A beleaguered group whose members are often shunned as outcasts and die of skin cancer before they reach 30, albinos are being targeted by witch doctors who are now marketing albino skin, bones, and hair as ingredients in potions that promise to bring wealth and good fortune. The young are the prime targets. In early May, Vumilia Makoye, a 17-year-old albino, was eating dinner with her family in their hut in western Tanzania when two men showed up with long knives. Vumilia had dropped out of school because of severe near-sightedness, a common problem for albinos. Vumilia’s mother Jeme saw the men and tried to barricade the door of their hut but the men overpowered her and burst in. The men sawed off Vumilia’s legs above the knee and ran away with the limbs. Police officials are at a loss to explain precisely why there is a wave of albino killings now. Commissioner Paul Chagonja said an influx of Nigerian movies, which play up witchcraft, might have something to do with it, along with rising food prices that were making people more desperate. There are more than 8,000 registered albinos in Tanzania. Police officers are drawing up lists of albinos in every corner of the country to better look after them, Morgellons Connected to Lyme Disease T here may be a dramatic new breakthrough for thousands of people who suffer from Morgellons, a mysterious illness in which people suffer from sores that produce strange fibers from the skin, crawling and biting sensations, fatigue, and mental fog. Morgellons victims are often diagnosed as delusional. But San Francisco physician Raphael Stricker is one of a few doctors who believes something real is happening. His research has focused on a type of plant bacteria called agrobacterium which is known to cause infections in animals and humans with compromised immune systems. In 2007, Dr. Stricker studied skin samples from seven Morgellons pa- 16 tients and found the DNA from the bacteria in all seven samples. Dr. Stricker believes the bacteria is entering the bloodstream from the bite of deer ticks. In fact, in a recent survey of 44 Morgellons patients in San Francisco, 43 of them tested positive for Lyme. “This suggests that the combination of the Lyme bacteria and the agrobacterium may work together to cause an unusual and emerging disease such as Morgellons,” Dr. Stricker says. and escorting albino children to school. Tanzania’s president even sponsored an albino woman for a seat in Parliament to show his support. Salvator Rweyemamu, a Tanzanian government spokesman, said the rash of killings was anathema to what Tanzania had been striving toward. “This is serious,” he continued, “because it continues some of the perceptions of Africa we’re trying to run away from.” But the killings go on. They have even spread to neighboring Kenya, where an albino woman was hacked to death in late May, with her eyes, tongue, and breasts gouged out. —CHARLES RAMMELKAMP However, research done by Vitaly Citovsky, professor of biochemistry and cell biology at Stony Brook University in New York, suggests that there may be a link between Morgellons and genetically modified (GM) food, as agrobacterium has been widely used in creating GM plants since the 1980s. The association of Morgellons disease with dirt and soil where agrobacterium lives, the widespread use of agrobacterium in genetically engineered plants, and the ability of agrobacterium to infect human cells all point towards a possible role of genetic engineering in the cause of Morgellans disease via agrobacterium. The scientists all agree that the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) needs to seriously fund further research on the causes of Morgellons beyond the $338,000 that it has pledged so far. —TIM SWARTZ SOURCE: CBS-11 DALLAS/FT. WORTH M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 We Want Your Spooky Photos! Have you captured on film a UFO, ghost, light orb, or any other event that defies easy explanation? If so, we want to publish it! Just mail us the photo, slide, or negative with a brief explanation as to where and when it was taken and what is unusual about it. If we publish your photo, you will receive a FREE 1-year subscription (or if already a subscriber, a FREE 1-year renewal). Mysteries Magazine PO Box 490 • Walpole, NH 03608 USA • www.MysteriesMagazine.com (Note: All submitted photos become the property of Mysteries Magazine and will not be returned.) WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM 17 Noteworthy Vampires of Celtic Heritage T he discovery of a 4,000-year-old vampire burial cairn, believed to be the world’s first such ritualized grave, has set the archaeological world on its ear, as it is similar to ancient Celtic tombs in Ireland and the British Isles, which were constructed to prevent bloodsucking “revenants” from rising out of the grave. The discovery of the gravesite, during a routine archaeological excavation of an early Bronze Age burial site in Mikulovice, eastern Bohemia, means that the concept of vampires can now be traced back to the cultural folklore of Indo-European tribes. During the site’s exploration, archaeologists also discovered the skeletal remains of a man whose bore the unmistakable signs of vampiric ritual, including a bronze spike driven through its chest. The corpse had also been weighted down with large stones to prevent it from returning to the world of the living. Only the ancient Celts in Europe and ancient Irish tribes carried out such rituals on suspected vampires. —MICHAEL LOHR SOURCES: BBC & LONDON SUNDAY TIMES Boy Kidnapped by “Little People” in AK A n intriguing story circulated out of Alaska in May, 2008 when a hunter recounted how he found a boy alleged to have been abducted by strange creatures known as the ircenrraat, or little people who dwell underground, who disorient and trap unwary humans. Nick Andrew Jr. from Marshall, AK was miles out of town on a snowmachine hunting birds when he decided to check a different location on a hunch. Stopping to look, he recognized a small boy standing all alone in middle of the marsh. He asked if he was alone. Scared and crying, the boy just answered, “I don’t know.” Andrew took the boy home, noting that there were no footprints in the snow to indicate anyone had walked into the area. But he counted at least 10 other snowmachiners in the neighborhood, none of whom had spotted the boy. It was not until the next day that the boy said he was brought into Pilcher Mountain, a site often associated with ircenrraat encounters. There, he was questioned and saw other little beings. “He said he made contact with a little girl abducted over 40 years ago,” Andrew said. “She told him who she was and she wanted help.” After that, the ircenrraat released the boy. “And that's when he came to, I guess, a few minutes before I found him.” VATICAN SAYS… It is OK to Believe In Aliens T he Rev. Jose Gabriel Funes (shown below), the Jesuit director of the Vatican Observatory near Rome, said that the vastness of the universe means it is possible there could be other forms of life outside Earth, even intelligent ones. In an interview published in May, 2008 by Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano, Funes said that such a notion “doesn’t contradict our faith” because aliens would still be God’s creatures. “Just as we consider earthly creatures as ‘a brother,’ and ‘sister,’ why should we not talk about an ‘extraterrestrial brother’? It would still be part of creation,” Funes said. Funes said science, especially astronomy, does not contradict religion, touching on a theme of Pope Benedict XVI, who has made exploring the relationship between faith and reason a key aspect of his papacy. —TIM SWARTZ SOURCE: THE INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE —TIM SWARTZ SOURCE: ANCHORAGE DAILY NEWS 18 M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 Noteworthy In Passing Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, a guru to the Beatles who introduced the West to transcendental meditation (TM), died on Feb. 5, 2008 at his home in the Dutch town of Vlodrop. He was thought to be 91 years old. He began teaching TM in 1955 and brought the technique to the United States in 1959. But the movement really took off after the Beatles visited his ashram in India in 1968, although he had a famous falling out with the rock stars when he discovered them using drugs at his Himalayan retreat. With the help of celebrity endorsements, Maharishi parlayed his interpretations of ancient scripture into a multi-milliondollar global empire. With his background in physics, he brought his message to the West in a language that mixed the occult and science. Science-fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke, who co-wrote the epic film 2001: A Space Odyssey and raised the idea of communications satellites in the 1940s, died on March 18, 2008 in Sri Lanka at age 90. Clarke w r o t e dozens of novels and collections of short stories and more than 30 non-fiction works during a career that began in the 1950s. He served as a TV com- WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM mentator during several of the Apollo moon missions and cowrote a 1970 account of the first lunar landing with the Apollo 11 crew. He was knighted in 1998. demanded respect. More important to him was the drug’s value as a revelatory aid for understanding what he saw as humanity’s oneness with nature. Physicist John A. Wheeler, a visionary physicist and teacher who helped invent the theory of nuclear fission, gave black holes their name, and argued about the nature of reality with Albert Einstein and Niels Bohr, died on April 13, 2008. He was 96. Dr. Wheeler was also involved in the Manhattan Project to build the world’s first atomic bomb. He later helped Edward Teller to develop the even more powerful hydrogen bomb. Erik Beckjord, a San Franciscobased paranormal investigator who specialized in researching reports of Bigfoot, died June 22, 2008. He was 69. Beckjord theorized that animals such as Bigfoot and the Loch Ness monster were extradimensional entities that only appeared on Earth for brief periods of time. But Beckjord is probably best known for his confrontational attit u d e against not only skeptics, but also fellow cryptozoologists. He actively promoted his claims on Internet message boards, which often turned into wars between Beckjord and his opponents. Indeed, many webmasters banned Beckjord from their sites. Despite the extreme nature of his claims, his powerful and aggressive personality drew considerable attention from the paranormal research community. Dr. Albert Hofmann, the mystical S w i s s chemist who gave the world LSD, died April 29, 2008 at his hilltop home near Basel, Switzerland. He was 102. Dr. Hofmann first synthesized the compound lysergic acid diethylamide in 1938 but did not discover its psychopharmacological effects until five years later, when he accidentally ingested the substance that became known to the counterculture as acid. Hofmann took LSD hundreds of times, but regarded it as a powerful psychotropic drug that Frank Joyce, a New Mexico newsman who reported on the Roswell Incident as it unfolded and was a familiar face with his outdoor report on KOB-TV, recently died at the age of 85. Joyce was in his 20s working at Roswell radio station KGFL in 1947 and was the first reporter to talk to rancher Mack Brazel about the strange, metallic debris discovered on the J.B. Foster ranch. Joyce thus became connected with the famous UFO story. He was interviewed about the incident a number of times over the years and depicted in documentaries and movies, such as the TV film Roswell. Later in his life, Joyce said that he had mixed feeling about his involvement. He liked the positive aspect of it but did not care for the people that did not believe that something unusual had happened. —TIM SWARTZ “All that we are is the result of what we have thought. The mind is everything. What we think we become.” —Maharishi Mahesh Yogi 19 Noteworthy Sodom and Gomorrah Destroyed by Asteroid A cuneiform clay tablet that has puzzled scholars for over 150 years has been translated for the first time and is now believed to be a Sumerian observation of an asteroid impact at Köfels, Austria, leaving in its wake a trail of destruction that may account for the biblical tale of Sodom and Gomorrah. The Planisphere clay tablet, which shows drawings of constellations and cuneiform, was inscribed around 700 BC. The noted Victorian archaeologist Sir Henry Layard unearthed the tablet in the remains of the library of the Assyrian royal palace at Nineveh, close to modernday Mosul, Iraq. The tablet is a copy of the night diary of a Sumerian astronomer who referred to the asteroid as a white stone bowl approaching the earth and recorded that it “vigorously swept along.” Alan Bond, managing director of Reaction Engines Ltd. and Mark Hempsell, senior lecturer in astronautics at Bristol University, used software to simulate trajectories and reconstruct the night sky thousands of years ago. They discovered that the Planesphere described the sky before dawn on June 29, 3123 BC. Half the tablet records planet positions and cloud cover, but the other half records an object large enough to be noted even though it is still in space. The astronomers made an accurate note of its trajectory relative to the stars which, to an error better than one degree is consistent with an impact at Köffels. Geologists have long puzzled over a giant landslide close to the town of Köfels in the Austrian Alps, but since there was no crater, they were unable to prove it had been caused by an asteroid. Now researchers say their translation of the Plani20 sphere offers proof that a mile-wide asteroid may have caused tens of thousands of deaths in a path that extended from Europe and into the Middle East. Scientists believe that the incoming angle of the asteroid was very low and that it clipped an alpine mountain called Gamskogel, which caused the asteroid to explode before it reached its final impact point. As it traveled down the valley it became a fireball, around six miles in diameter, causing the massive landslide near Köffels. “The ground heating, though very short, would be enough to ignite any flammable material (752°F), including human hair and clothes. It is probable more people died under the plume than in the Alps due to the impact blast,” explained Mark Hempsell. He also says that at least 20 ancient myths record devastation of the type and scale of the asteroid’s impact, including the Old Testament account of the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, which relates a tale of death and destruction when God rained fire and brimstone down upon the cities because of the inhabitant’s evil ways. —TIM SWARTZ SOURCE: BRISTOL UNIVERSITY Gnome Caught on Video A town in South America is living in fear after several sightings of a “creepy gnome” that locals claim stalks the streets at night. The small creature, who wears a pointy hat and has a distinctive sideways walk, was caught on video in March, 2008 by a group of teenagers. Jose Alvarez, who caught the creature on his cellphone camera, told El Tribuno that they spotted the creature in General Guemes, in the province of Salta, Argentina. “We were chatting about our last fishing trip. It was 1 a.m. in the morning. I began to film a bit with my cell phone while the others were chatting and joking. Suddenly we heard a weird noise as if someone was throwing stones.” Alvarez said that the group then saw a gnome-like figure jump from some nearby bushes. After records showed that locals have reported seeing the creature for decades, police in Salta have launched an investigation. Only weeks before it was captured on camera, frightened railworkers called the police to say they had spotted the crab-walking gnome moving around the train tracks at night. El Tribuno reported that fear is now so widespread that the town mayor has been inundated with calls from terrified locals and has launched a police enquiry into the affair. He said that he was a little skeptical, but had to respect that gnomes are a part of their culture. —TIM SWARTZ SOURCE: THE SUN (UK) M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 Noteworthy DRS. BAFFLED BY BLEEDING GIRL A 13-year-old girl from Uttar Pradesh, India, is suffering from a strange disorder where she bleeds through her skin without being cut or scratched. Twinkle Dwivedi has even undergone transfusions after pints of blood seeped through her eyes, nose, hairline, neck, and the soles of her feet. Sometimes her condition is so bad she wakes up with her entire body covered in dried blood. Her frantic family have sought help from numerous doctors as well as preachers from many different religions, without success. Last year, Twinkle was a normal 12year-old but then she suddenly started bleeding between five and 20 times a day. “It didn’t hurt, she said, “but it was scary and messy, and my friends thought it was disgusting.” Twinkle was thrown out of one school and another school refused to teach her because of her strange condition. Now she studies at home and rarely sees other children. The first time the bleeding happened from Twinkle's mouth in July of 2007, her parents took her to a doctor w h o sug- gested a common ulcer. But then, a few weeks later, the bleeding also started from her nose, eyes, feet, and hairline. Twinkle’s parents took her to see dozens of different doctors who could not find a reason for her blood loss. Finally, doctors at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in Delhi decided she has Type 2 Platelet Disorder, a rare condition where blood is dangerously low in clotting particles. However, consultant haematologist Dr. Drew Provan of Barts Hospital in London believes her condition is not related to the number of clotting particles, but something called the von Willebrand factor, which helps platelets stick to blood vessels and blood to clot. Sufferers of von Willebrand disease are missing a protein critical to the initial stages of bloodclotting. The glue-like protein interacts with platelets to form a plug to prevent the blood from free-flowing at the site of an injury. People with von Willebrand disease are unable to make the plug. Dr. Provan suggests that Dwivedi see a coagulation specialist for the condition, but Twinkle’s family is poor and unless a cure can be found soon, she will continue growing weaker and may one day die from blood-loss. —TIM SWARTZ SOURCE: THE TELEGRAPH Giant Fish Feasts on Swimmers A huge catfis, called a Goon, has started killing people in India and Nepal, after it developed a taste for partially burnt human corpses. The extraordinary creature has been investigated by biologist Jeremy Wade for a TV documentary to be shown in the UK. He said that the locals told him of a theory that this monster has grown extra large on a diet of partially burnt corpses from funeral pyres. Wade discounts theories that crocodiles could be responsible for the carnage before turning his attention to Goonches, among the world's biggest freshwater fish. He caught one fish which tipped the scales at 161 pounds and was nearly six feet long, a world record weight and far bigger than any landed before. An 18-year-old man disappeared in the river in 2007, dragged down by something described as like an “elongated pig.” But the first victim of a Goonch attack was thought to have been a 17-year-old Nepalese boy. He was killed in April 1988 as he cooled himself in the river. Three months later, another young boy was mysteriously dragged underwater as his father watched helplessly. Local officials said that rumors of “giant, man-eating fish” were merely local superstitions and that there was no reason to put an end to the tradition of placing the burnt remains of funeral pyres in the Great Kali. —TIM R. SWARTZ SOURCE: THE SUN (UK) WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM 21 Noteworthy Peru Meteorite May Rewrite Science S cientists who have been examining samples of the meteorite that plunged into the Peruvian countryside in 2007 say that the space rock should have shattered and dispersed long before reaching the ground. The meteorite, which left a 16-yard-wide crater last September, made headlines when over 100 people complained that strange gases coming from the crater made them sick. Although follow-up investigations could find no reason for the mysterious sickness, experts say that the event challenges conventional theories about the science of space impacts. Usually, only meteorites made of metal survive the passage through Earth’s atmosphere sufficiently intact to produce a crater. But the object that came down in the Puno region of Peru was a fragile stony meteorite. During its descent, it should have fragmented into smaller pieces, yet the estimated one-yard-wide meteorite is thought to have hit the ground in one piece. This might have been due to the meteorite’s high speed (15,000 mph), in which fragments were unable to escape the shockwave barrier through the atmosphere. However, Dr. Thomas Kenkmann from Humboldt University in Berlin, Germany, suggested that the crater was probably caused by a meteorite traveling at low speed and at a slanting angle. Under this scenario, the space rock would have broken into just a few pieces, the largest of which would have made the crater. Others suggest that the meteorite was made of iron and that the bulk of it still remains hidden in the bottom of the water-filled crater. —TIM SWARTZ / SOURCE: BBC Saint Padre Pio on Display S ome 15,000 worshipers gathered on April 25, 2008 in the town of San Giovanni Rotondo, Italy, to view the exhumed body of saint and mystic Padre Pio, on display for the first time since his death in 1968. Catholic practice allows for the remains of saints to be exhumed, checked for their state of deterioration, and exhibited as relics for veneration. Saint Padre Pio’s body was exhumed on March 3 so that it could be prepared for public display to commemorate the anniversary of his death 40 years ago. Local Archbishop monsignor Domenico D’Ambrosio, who was present at the exhumation, said there was no unpleasant smell and the body was well preserved. Padre Pio’s body is central to the cult that surrounds him. For believers, the visible evidence of his sanctity was the stigmata—the wounds of Jesus on the cross—that first appeared on Pio in 1910. But according to a book published in 2007, Padre Pio may have used carbolic acid bought from a local drugstore to create his wounds. A team of biochemists and other experts have worked since the exhumation to get the body into a fit state to be shown. Padre Pio’s face was covered with a lifelike silicone mask of the type used in wax museums. This prompted a circle of Padre Pio devotees to ask for an autopsy to establish that the remains were authentic. Forensic scientists who took part in the exhumation denied his face was badly decomposed. Rather, they said the mask was used to protect the sensibilities of those who visited the body. The Capuchin friar was made a saint by the late Pope John Paul II. He was credited by his fellow friars with more than 1,000 miraculous cures and interventions. Until his death in 1968, the church authorities remained deeply skeptical of the claims made on Padre Pio’s behalf. It was only the momentum generated by his devotees that prompted a change in attitude. More than a million people are expected to file past a transparent casket holding his restored corpse between now and September, 2009. —TIM SWARTZ SOURCE: THE GUARDIAN (UK) 22 M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 Noteworthy 40,000-YEAR-OLD A Call from FOOTPRINTS FOUND the Grave F ootprints left in volcanic ash that fell in central Mexico’s Valsequillo Basin about 40,000 years ago are evidence that humans have inhabited the Americas far longer than previously confirmed. Silvia Gonzalez from Liverpool John Moores University and Matthew Bennett of Bournemouth University found the footprints in an abandoned quarry close to the Cerro Toluquilla volcano south of Mexico City, in 2003. The footprints were preserved as trace fossils in volcanic ash along what was the shoreline of an ancient volcanic lake. Recent excavations in Baja California have unearthed a rock shelter containing heaps of shells that are approximately 44,000 years old, a finding that bolsters the notion that people lived throughout the region about 40 millennia ago. These findings support a theory that the first colonies may have arrived in the western hemisphere by water, migrating along the Pacific coast, rather than by foot. —TIM SWARTZ SOURCE: SCIENCE NEWS Skin Can See Colors, Shapes A researcher at Tel Aviv University says that humans may be able to see colors and shapes with their skin. Engineering professor Leonid Yaroslavsky explained that skin vision is likely a natural ability involving light-sensitive cells that are connected to neuro-machinery in the body and brain. He believes that once understood, skin vision could help the blind regain sight. Yaroslavsky is currently developing imaging simulation theories, which may lead to devices that can detect radiation, new nightvision goggles, or near-weightless mechanisms to steer spaceships to stars beyond our galaxy. Traditional imaging lenses only work within a limited range of electromagnetic radiation, are costly, and limited by weight and field of view. But opticless imaging devices could be adapted to any kind of radiation and wavelength. They could essentially work with a 360-degree field of view, their imaging capability determined by computer power rather than the laws of light diffraction. WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM C huck Peck (shown below) died in the September 12, 2008 Metrolink train collision but his Simi Valley, CA family is unable to explain why they received calls from his cell phone hours after the collision. As firefighters worked to rescue survivors, family members said Peck's cell phone kept calling his son, brother, stepmother, sister, and fiancée. But when they answered, all they heard was static. And when family members called back, the calls went straight to voice mail. In all, Peck’s family say they received about 35 calls from Peck’s cell phone through the night. Nearly five hours after the crash at 9:08 p.m., a family memner received a call. “We were yelling in the phone, ‘hang in there baby. W e ' r e gonna get you out. Yo u ’ r e gonna b e o kay, ’ ” Katz said. When the rescue efforts turned to recovery, there was another call, which prompted search crews to trace it. They realized it was coming from the first train so they went back in one last time where the team discovered Peck's body. It appeared that he had died immediately on impact and that there was no way he could have been making the calls. The calls stopped at 3:28 a.m., about an hour before Peck’s body was found. However, the phone calls helped the family get through the night. Investigators said they may never know how those calls were made because Peck’s phone was never found. —TIM SWARTZ —TIM SWARTZ SOURCE: NEW KERALA (INDIA) SOURCE: KTLA-TV 23 Mysteries on View Seattle’s Museum of the Mysteries Draws Paranormal Buffs For paranormal aficionados, the Seattle Museum of the Mysteries is a quiet, friendly haven where one can gather with others who share a similar fascination with the world’s mysteries. by Roy Stevenson ucked away in a basement in Seattle’s Capitol Hill lurks the Seattle Museum of the Mysteries, a nonprofit museum and research center dedicated to furthering education, research, and history of paranormal science and ancient civilizations. The museum also explores alternate explanations of reality, such as UFOs, crop circles, Bigfoot lore, and local mysteries. Special exhibits, photographs, artifacts, T books, documents, and weird inventions line the walls of the museum. A wax head reconstructed from FBI descriptions of D.B. Cooper, the hijacker who bailed out of a commercial airliner over southwest Washington with a $200,000 ransom on November 24, 1971, never to be seen again, sits in a place of honor on a shelf, as do four sets of plaster casts of Sasquatch footprints. One set was found near Walla Walla, WA. The other three are copies of the Bluff Creek, CA casts taken by Roger Charlette LeFevre, director of the Seattle Museum of the Mysteries. 24 M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 Mysteries on View The Maury Island UFO Mystery O n June 21, 1947, Harold Dahl, his son, and two crewmen were salvaging logs south of Maury Island in the Puget Sound when they saw six doughnut-shaped disks hovering over the bay. One appeared to be in trouble and the wobbling disk dropped some sort of shiny metal on the beach and into the water, wounding Dahl’s son and killing their dog. A B-25 bomber then crashed near Kelso, WA, soon after take-off from McChord Field south of Tacoma, carrying rock samples and pieces of the UFO from Maury Island. Was the bomber shot down by an unknown government agency to prevent analysis of the rock samples? Or did someone else have reason for preventing this sample from being made public? This intriguing mystery is just one of the UFO sightings explored at the museum. —ROY STEVENSON Patterson of the famous Patterson-Gimlin film. The Sasquatch exhibits are amongst the most comprehensive in the country, with footprint casts, skull comparison charts, hand and knuckle casts, hair samples, and artwork. Pacific Northwest anomalies that never quite made the national press also grab a guest’s attention at the museum. One of them is Mels’ Hole, near Manastash Ridge in Ellensburg, WA, which some say is the deepest volcanic vent hole in the world. Another is the ghost town of Wellington that was abandoned after a catastrophic train crash on the Iron Goat Trail near Steven’s Pass. One of the worst train wrecks in U.S. history, it killed 96 people in 1910. Some say ghosts still haunt the ruins of the abandoned town. Another display tells about Dr. Linda Hazzard, the northwest’s first serial killer who lured at least 40 unsuspecting women to her health farm between 1910 and 1938 and proceeded to starve them to death. She was nicknamed the “Tomato Soup Killer” because she fed the women a tomato-water broth to weaken them. She then had them sign over their possessions and then starved them to death. Convicted of manslaughter, she served time in the State Penitentiary at Walla Walla, but eventually returned to Ollala and continued her “work.” The real horror was how state officials and locals looked the other way for years while she performed her grim work. (www.starvationheights.com has more details about this macabre case.) But there is more here than a collection of unusual artifacts. The private book collection of James Widener Ray holds shelf after shelf of books on all aspects of the paranormal. Visitors can also watch DVDs and videos about the paranormal or browse through scrapbooks about the unusual and bizarre, in the small lounge area. The museum also hosts weekly A wax head presentations by aureconstructed thors, explorers, refrom FBI descriptions of searchers, investigators, D.B. Cooper and experts. z sits in a place of honor on a shelf, as do four sets of plaster casts of Sasquatch footprints. WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM The Seattle Museum of the Mysteries is located at 623 Broadway Ave., Seattle, WA 98102. For more info, call 206-328-6499 or visit www.seattlechatclub.org. 25 Archaeological Anomalies M U T UA L LY A S S U R E D D E ST R U C T I O N Has it Happened Before? Considering the destructive potential of our atomic arsenals, our world could well be reduced to charcoal by a thermonuclear war. But could such an event have happened in our long-distant past? Archaeologists have dug up tektites in Baalbek, and many of the huge stone platforms (long assumed to be connected to Baal worship) are vitrified. 26 by Kelly Bell hen the first atomic bomb was detonated in the New Mexico desert in 1945, its heat melted the desert sand into millions of small glassy fragments in a process called vitrification. Some of the scientists who examined this debris were stunned to find it looked identical to the tektites that, for centuries, have been found in the vast region stretching from Tasmania to north of the Philippines and the East Indies to East Africa. Although tektites had long been assumed to be meteorites, there was the question of why, if of extraterrestrial origin, none have fallen in recent times? Furthermore, nearly all meteorites are composed of iron or stone—not glass. The 1945 New Mexico atomic test may provide a clue. Considering the lack of any other plausible explanation, could it be that W the tektites covering so much of the Pacific Basin and East Africa were blasted aloft by nuclear explosions and then rained back down onto this huge area? Additionally, the entire desert between Damascus, Syria and Baghdad, Iraq is so littered with charred, heat-blackened rocks that literally thousands of square miles of Mesopotamia must at one time have been subjected to tremendous heat. Such stones have also been found in Australia, France, India, South Africa, and Chile. They are composed mainly of aluminum and beryllium, and analysis shows them to have been exposed not only to extreme heat, but also to powerful doses of radioactivity. Additionally, north of Beirut, Lebanon, there is the ancient city of Baalbek. In ruins since Biblical times, the city was dedicated to the worship of the sun god Baal. Archaeologists have dug up tektites in Baalbek, and many of the huge stone platforms (long assumed to be connected to Baal worship) are vitrified. The standard explanation for the partial melting of these rock structures is that they were struck by lightning. The problem here is that it would have taken many lightning bolts striking the same spot to vitrify the stone. Lightning is a rare occurrence in the arid Middle East. This is especially true when we consider that vast areas of Mongolia’s Gobi Desert are also mysteriously vitrified. Moreover, outside Cuzco, Peru, there is a vitrified hillside covering 18,000 square yards. The 3,000-year-old Indian epic Mahabharata describes a battle scene in which a “blazing missile” was shot into the midst of an army and produced “a radiance of smokeless fire” that instantly immolated chariots, men, elephants, and forests, and caused rivers to boil.” The passage in quesM YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 Archaeological Anomalies tion is downright sobering: “It was as if the elements had been unleashed. The sun spun round. Scorched by the incandescent heat of the weapon, the world reeled in fever. Elephants were set on fire by the heat…The water boiled, the animals died, the enemy was mown down and the raging of the blaze made the trees collapse in rows as in a forest fire… Horses and war chariots were burnt up, and the scene looked like the aftermath of a conflagration. Thousands of chariots were destroyed, then deep silence descended on the sea. The winds began to blow and the Earth grew bright. It was a terrible sight to see. The corpses of the fallen were mutilated by the terrible heat so that they no longer looked like human beings.” There is no way of knowing how long before the Mahabharata was written that this Hiroshima-type incident took place, but the real question is how could the ancients have known how to perfectly describe an atomic blast if they had not actually witnessed it? If there were witnesses who later described these events, they would seem to have been quite fortunate to have survived the great burning. It is likely that the reason for the paucity of accounts of how the vitrification occurred is that few survived to tell the tale. Aerial Warfare verall, it appears that long ago, someone with an extremely advanced technology laid waste to a great deal of the Earth’s surface. By returning to primeval India, we find evidence that this war was aerial as well as terrestrial. An Indian classic from millennia ago recounts how three “floating cities” were destroyed by what sounds like nuclear missiles. Known as the Drona Parva, it O WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM contains this unsettling passage: Formerly the valiant Asuras had in heaven three cities. …When, however, the three cities came together in the firmament, the Lord Mahadeva pierced them with that terrible shaft of his consisting of three knots. The Danavas were unable to gaze at that shaft inspired with the Yuga fire and composed of Vishnu and Soma. Exploration of India reveals clues that support these primordial accounts. 19th-century British explorer Charles DeCamp w a s A typical tektite. traveling between the Ganges River and the mountainous area of Rajmahal when he came across stone ruins he described as having been fused together “…like lumps of tin struck by a stream of molten steel.” Then during a 19th-century hunting expedition deep inside an Indian forest, British sportsman/explorer H.J. Hamilton got the shock of his life when he stumbled upon an ancient building that had been exposed to such heat that its walls were crystallized. Filled with curiosity, he got the shock of his life when he entered the structure: “Suddenly the ground gave way under my feet with a curious noise. I got into a safe place and then widened the hole, which had appeared, with my rifle butt and lowered myself into it. I was in a long and narrow corridor.” Easing his way cautiously down the passage he saw a table and chair in which a figure was slumped. The furniture and humanoid outline were also crystallized. Thinking it was a statue he took a closer look and was horrified by what he saw. “Under the ‘glass’ that covered that ‘statue’ a skeleton could clearly be seen!” Yet another ancient epic was written by long-forgotten Indian scribes who gave descriptions so detailed that they seem to have come from eyewitness accounts. Called the Mausola Parva, it describes how an entire army was decimated by a “gigantic messenger of death” that poisoned food stores, turned birds white, and caused survivors’ hair and fingernails to fall out. It likened the detonation to “ten thousand suns.” Those who survived the initial blast seemed to have known what to do in order to survive, as the following indicates: “To escape from this fire the soldiers threw themselves in streams to wash themselves and all their equipment.” Although India appears to have been the center of this hypothetical prehistoric thermonuclear holocaust (or perhaps it is just that more written accounts from India survived), the clues of its destruction are worldwide. Did an earlier civilization exterminate itself? Could the lost societies of Atlantis, Mu, and Lemuria all have existed at one time, only to obliterate themselves so long ago that we have only the barest evidence of their existence and passing? Scientific dogma says that these suppositions are ludicrous. Yet this establishment cannot even tell us where we came from, why we age, or even why we sleep. Perhaps the time has come to kick the pedestal from beneath the Great God Science. Who knows what we might learn? z 27 treasures of the deep Oldest Sub-Saharan Shipwreck Found eologists from De Beers, the world’s largest diamond mining company, have discovered a late15th-century shipwreck behind a seawall on the Atlantic coast of Namibia. The wreck, which is the oldest ever found in sub-Saharan Africa, has been badly battered by the sea, but the site has already yielded human remains, more than 50 ivory elephant tusks, several tons of copper and tin, pewter tableware, navigational instruments, thousands of gold and silver coins, and weapons, including muskets, swords, and breach-loading swivel cannons. G The coins constitute the most gold ever found at an archaeological site in Africa outside of Egypt’s Valley of the Kings. Some of the coins were minted in Spain and depict Spanish monarchs Ferdinand II and Isabella I, who ruled in the late 1400s and early 1500s. Others were minted in Portugal and bear references to Portuguese King John II, who ruled between 1481 and 1495. Artifacts linked to Portuguese royalty suggest that the 75-foot-long ship could be the caravel of explorer Bartholomeu Dias, a nobleman from the Portuguese royal family who, in 1488, was the first European to sail around the Cape of Good Hope, opening the lucrative trading route with the Far East. Dias disappeared in a storm off the cape in 1500. Roman Boat Found in Spain he wreck of a first-century BC Roman boat was dredged up from the bay of Cartagena, Spain in March of 2008. The vessel is in nearly perfect condition and lies at a depth of about 330 feet. Experts think that the Roman boat was used to transport wine, oil, and T Whale Vomit Worth $1 Million T wo beachcombers who found 110 pounds of whale vomit while walking their dog near Criccieth, North Wales, could become millionaires as a result of the find. Commonly known as ambergris, the clear substance vomited by sperm whales darkens and hardens over time and becomes a sweet-smelling, waxy substance that has long been used in manufacturing perfume. It usually washes up in the Americas and Australia, so it is unusual for it to be found on a British beach. —JUDITH KANE 28 other perishables and could have held up to 1,500 amphorae, suggesting that it was a ship of considerable size. More investigations will be carried out. Baltic Sea Yields Shipwreck Swedish film crew using a remotecontrolled submarine to make a documentary spotted a nearly intact shipwreck in the Baltic Sea. The wooden ship, which lies between the Swedish mainland and Latvia, is about 70 feet long and is thought to be a 17th-century Dutch merchant vessel. Experts say that icy waters and low levels of oxygen and saline helped to preserve the ship, which features intricate carvings. A Bust of Caesar Found in River ivers in May, 2008 pulled a lifesized marble bust of Julius Caesar from the Rhone River near Arles, in southern France. The statue— the earliest surviving representation of the Roman leader—is thought to date to as early as 46 BC, when Caesar founded Arles as a base for his campaign against Pompey, his rival for leadership of the Roman Empire. Experts think that the bust may have been carved from life, in part because it resembles Caesar as depicted on coins struck during his lifetime, at about age 50. The bust has a broken nose, but is otherwise well preserved. Experts speculate that it was thrown into the river after Caesar was assassinated in 44 BC. Several other artifacts were found at the site, including a nearly six-foot-tall marble statue of the god Neptune and two smaller bronze statues, one of which is a Greek statue of a satyr with his hands tied behind his back. D M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 treasures of the deep Captain Kidd’s Ship Found A team of underwater archaeologists working off the coast of a tiny island near the Dominican Republic have discovered the wreck of the Quedagh Merchant, the last ship captained by legendary buccaneer William Kidd. In 1696, Kidd was given a letter of marquee signed by England’s King William III, authorizing him to hunt pirates and seize the ships of Britain’s enemies at sea. Kidd was sent to the Red Sea and Indian Ocean, where pirates were attacking ships owned by the British East India Company. Early successes against the French earned him wealth and glory, but his expedition ran into difficulties, including a leaky ship and an outbreak of cholera that devastated his crew. Kidd then refused to allow the British navy to press members of his crew into service and often failed to turn over the 10 percent of his plunder that all privateers were supposed to remit to the Crown. In 1698, Kidd captured the Quedagh Merchant, a 500-ton Moorish trader loaded with gold, silver, and valuable textiles. After seizing the ship, which was sailing under a French flag, he learned that the captain was an Englishman and briefly considered handing the ship back, but his crew threatened to mutiny, so instead he renamed it Adventure Prize and set sail for the Caribbean. When he arrived there, he learned that the ship had officially been part of an East India Company convoy and that he had been declared a pirate and was a wanted man. Kidd loaded gold, silver, and silk onto a smaller, less conspicuous sloop and sailed to New York in an ill-fated attempt to plead his case and clear his name of criminal charges. But the men with whom he entrusted the Quedagh Merchant looted the ship of its remaining treasure and then set it ablaze and adrift. Kidd was arrested and charged with piracy and the murder of a crew member. He was sent to London, where he was tried, convicted, and hanged in 1701, but the hangman’s rope broke during the execution, leaving Kidd only slightly injured, so he was hanged a second time. His body was left hanging for three tides of the River Thames, and was then locked in a gibbet (an iron cage), dipped in tar, and left dangling over the Thames for two years as a warning to would-be pirates. The wreck of the Quedagh Merchant, was found just 70 feet from the coast of Catalina Island in crystal-clear waters that are less than 10 feet deep. Experts say that studying the wreck’s construction, contents, and armaments has potential for revealing further information about Captain Kidd and piracy in the Caribbean and offers a rare opportunity to test the historical record against the archaeological record. The wreck site will ultimately be converted to an underwater preserve, accessible to divers and snorkelers. —JUDITH KANE Jacobian Ship Found in English Channel n June of 2008, the wreck of a richly jeweled 17th-century ship was discovered in 23-feet-deep waters in the English Channel, off the coast of Dorset. Among the treasures recovered from the three-masted ship is a wooden statue of a merman, whose eyes would have been set with precious stones. Experts say that the sculpture was probably one of a set that adorned the ship’s stern and that the vessel would have been one of the largest of its kind when it sank around 1520. There are no known maritime records of the sinking and the ship’s identity is not yet known, but Britain was at war with Spain, France, and the Dutch at the time, and experts believe that the vessel was likely of British or Dutch origin. I WWII Destroyer Discovered in Fiord he Norwegian Navy has located the wreck of the HMS Hunter, a British Royal Navy destroyer sunk by the German fleet in 1940, during the first of two battles for control of the Arctic port city of Narvik. The ship rests at a depth of more than 1,000 feet on the bottom of the Ofot fjord, on Norway’s northern coast. Only 35 of the ship’s 145member crew survived. Hundreds more perished aboard two German destroyers, six German merchant ships, and several other British ships that were sunk during the engagement. The site was marked as a war grave in 2008 by a procession of ships that conducted memorial ceremonies on their decks as they steamed across the site. Honorees and family members laid wreaths and poured a tot of rum into the ocean in the traditional tribute of the Norwegian people for those lost at sea. T —JUDITH KANE WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM 29 haunted heritage AR’s Haunted Crescent Hotel T Many restless spirits walk the halls at the Crescent Hotel and Spa, located in the Ozark Mountain resort town of Eureka Springs, AR. 30 By Carolyn Beavers Gonzales he foreboding, gothic Crescent with its many towers, overhanging balconies, and 18-inch-thick granite walls was built between 1884 and 1886 by regional developers and railroad officials who wanted to take advantage of the national interest in the “healing waters” that were bubbling up from the ground nearby. The hotel may have gained its first ghost when one of the workmen, reportedly an Irish stonemason, fell to his death during the hotel’s construction. After the hotel’s completion, people came from around the country to “take in the waters” in hopes of curing or easing a variety of ailments. By the early 1900s, the health spa’s popularity declined, and from 1902 until 1907, the Frisco Railroad operated the Crescent as a hotel in the summer only. In 1908, the Crescent was opened as the Crescent College and Conservatory for Young Women. In 1937, Norman Baker, a charlatan doctor, purchased the Crescent to turn it into a hospital and health resort. Baker began his medical practice by starting a hospital in Muscatine but in 1936, he was convicted of practicing medicine without a license. Despite this setback, Baker remodeled the Crescent and in the process, removed some of its distinctive wooden handrails and balconies. He also covered fine woodwork in jarring shades of red, orange, black, and yellow paint. He decorated his own penthouse in shades of purple and hung machine guns from the walls. In addition, he installed secret escape passages for himself, in case members of the American Medical Association came after him to shut him down. Baker moved his cancer patients from Iowa to Arkansas and attracted other patients by advertising his health resort at the Crescent as a place where one could be M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 haunted heritage cured of cancer without having to undergo x-rays or surgeries. Officially, Baker’s cures consisted of nothing more than drinking spring water and using various home remedies. Although most official reports say that Baker did not actually kill anyone with his medical treatments, local legends say that Baker experimented on both the living and dead. For instance, one of his miracle cures for brain tumors was said to involve peeling open a patient’s head and pouring a mixture of spring water and watermelon seeds directly onto the brain. He also is rumored to have performed other bizarre experiments, including live dissections. The many who died from these experiments, or from their own untreated illnesses, were said to have been burned in an incinerator in the middle of the night. Since Baker claimed that he could cure cancer in a matter of weeks, he had to hide the fact that numerous patients were dying every month. So those in the advanced stages of illness were moved to an “asylum” area, where they died in extreme pain. Finally, in 1940, the law caught up with Baker, and the so-called hospital was closed, Baker was fined a minimal $4,000, and sentenced to four years in Leavenworth Prison. After his release from prison Baker moved to Florida and lived comfortably until his death in 1958. The Crescent began a comeback in 1946, when new owners started restoration and again opened it as a hotel. Many changes were made through the years, and today, the elegant old hotel continues to fascinate its many visitors with its strange history. Ghost tours are regularly available for those wanting to learn the Crescent’s secrets where various entities are often seen, heard, and photographed. Reported Ghostly Sightings oom 218 is said to be a particular hotspot for strange paranormal occurrences. There is a specter that hotel staff call “Michael the Irishman” who is seen on the spot where the workman fell to his death. Room occupants often say that in the room doors slam shut mysteriously, and they hear footsteps when no one is there. One guest was violently shaken awake at night to find that no one else was in the room. Another guest awoke in the middle of the night and saw blood spattered all over the walls and ran downstairs screaming. But when hotel staff examined the room, they could find no traces of blood. Another reported ghost at the Crescent is that of a distinguished-looking man with a mustache who is dressed in oldfashioned, formal clothing who is often seen in the lobby where people speak to him, but he never responds. The hotel also has a photograph, made by an unknown photographer, which shows a misty figure slouching in the closet of Room 202. And Room 419 is reportedly occupied by “Miss Theadora,” who often locks the door to keep people out and has been known to pack a guest’s bags and put them by the door in a spectral encouragement to vacate the premises. Another well-known ghost is that of a nurse who is seen pushing a gurney down the hallways of R Crescent Hotel, c. 1886. WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM the second floor. In addition, the ghost of a young woman student, who reportedly either jumped or was pushed to her death from the roof or upper balcony, is sometimes sighted. The Crescent staff is familiar with strange occurrences, including one of the cooks, who saw the apparition of a small child dressed in old-fashioned clothes skipping around the kitchen. Also, on more than one occasion, the cook opened the kitchen door and turned on the lights to see some or all of the pots and pans flying off their hooks and onto the floor. SciFi Channel’s Ghost Hunters even spent a week at the Crescent investigating strange phenomena and filming an episode of their show. One of the team members came back to his room, 419, to discover that his computer had been propped up by the door. He had left it by the TV, and no one else had moved it. The team also got high electromagnetic field readings in rooms 419 and 250. In addition, they saw an image on their thermal camera in the morgue of what looked like a Civil War soldier. After their experiences, they proclaimed the hotel to be the second most active site they had ever visited. Psychics say they believe that more than 500 spirits may inhabit the site, many of which are thought to be of people who died during the days of Norman Baker’s horrific medical experiments. But they also say that the mountain upon which the Crescent is built is a powerful earthenergy spot that was a sacred site to American Indians, who used the area for ceremonies and possibly for burials. Local psychics say that they and others are trying to help the spirits move on, but the large number of sightings indicates that this may take some time. Meanwhile, the Crescent Hotel and Spa remains a pretty sure bet for those looking for a paranormal experience. z For more info, write to Crescent Hotel and New Moon Spa, 75 Prospect Ave., Eureka Springs, AR 72632, www.crescent-hotel.com, or call 800-342-9766. 31 Arcane Cults THE SKY KINGDOM OF M A L AY S I A Ayah Pin: Heretic or Healer? M Malaysian spiritual leader Ayah Pin claims to be God’s latest incarnation. Ayah Pin 32 by Kenaz Filan any religions have erected monuments to their faith, but only the Sky Kingdom built a twostory pink teapot, a concrete fishing boat, and an orange umbrella-shaped building. While a casual visitor might have mistaken Ayah Pin’s spiritual headquarters for an amusement park, many of his Malaysian countrymen were not amused. Despite constitutional guarantees of freedom of religion, the Sky Kingdom and its leader have been the subjects of a vigorous campaign of persecution for years. In 1973, Pin declared himself God’s latest incarnation. (Prior incarnations, according to Pin, include Shiva, Buddha, Jesus, and Mohammed). As God, he asserted that he had reincarnated on earth with yet another message for mankind: you all come from me, and to return to me you must be united. Hence, according to Rosly Abdul Samad, one of his followers, “He doesn’t teach any religion or faith. He just heals those with troubled hearts, minds, and souls by offering advice and spiritual guidance, regardless of their religious background.” Pin began preaching his message in 1975. Twenty years later, he and a few of his followers founded the Sky Kingdom compound in Malaysia’s remote Terengganu state. There, on its six-acre headquarters, they began building unusual structures based on dreams by Pin and his followers. Each structure paid tribute to various religions. The teapot dispensed God’s blessings over the world, represented by a vase. For instance, water collected from the vase was then distributed to visitors as a blessing. The giant yellow umbrella represented the Nine Planets of Hindu astrology and a “shelter for God’s faithful” while the fishing boat represented Noah’s Ark and the crescent moon the indigenous peoples of Malaysia and the Orang Bunian (Malaysian forest elves). Moreover, the Sky Kingdom placed great stock in visions. Many of the people who came to the Sky Kingdom claimed they saw Pin or his brightly colored buildings in a dream. Pin greeted pilgrims and devotees while seated on a circular dais and smoking Salem cigarettes. From there, clad in a bright blue robe and an ornate turban, he interpreted their dreams, offered advice, bestowed blessings, and healed illnesses. As he preached, teenage girls fanned him with ostrich feathers. As his fame grew, Pin attracted followers from Bali, Singapore, and other countries. And since he accepted members from all religions, Pin counted a large number of Hindus, Buddhists, and Christians among his entourage. Estimates on the total number of Sky Kingdom followers range from M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 Arcane Cults 3,000 to 30,000. It is difficult to tell, because many have been driven underground by social disapproval and legal threats. a serious crime, which can be punished with caning or imprisonment. So in 2001, Pin was arrested for “humiliating Islam” and spent one month in jail. As a result, many of Pin’s Malay followers kept their affiliation with the Sky Kingdom secret. Others reminded authorities that Pin had ordered his Muslim followers to obey Islamic laws. later, 35 masked assailants armed with machetes and Molotov cocktails attacked the Sky Kingdom compound, destroying cars, burning the giant umbrella, and damaging the teapot). The Divine Teapot Pin escaped capture during the raid; n some ways, the Sky Kingdom according to some of his devotees, he was would seem an ideal reflection of cloaked by God’s protection and walked Malaysia’s population and culture. unnoticed through the hostile crowd. As Situated on the maritime trade of 2006, it was believed that routes between China and the Pin was hiding in neighboring Middle East, Malaysia’s populaThailand, where he is said to be tion has sizeable East Asian and suffering from chronic diabetes South Asian elements. Hindu and other ailments. While he remandirs and Buddhist shrines apmains at large, his compound pear alongside Christian churches; remains deserted; the teapot in remote areas, indigenous peoand other buildings now lie in ples still practice their ruins. animist/shamanic traditions. And Malaysia is considered a relawhile there have been conficts in tively progressive and liberal Isthe past between religions and lamic country. Bad international ethnic groups, by and large, publicity surrounding the Sky Malaysia is remarkably integrated. Kingdom arrests—and the But the Malay people who heavy-handed treatment of Pin make up a bare majority (60%) of and his devotees—embarrassed the population are overwhelmMalaysian political and business ingly Muslim. A Malaysian citizen leaders. Even many devout of Indian or Chinese ancestry may Malaysian Muslims feel that the be any religion but according to Sky Kingdom is a peaceful and the Malaysian constitution, ethnic harmless group that poses no Malays are considered Muslim at danger to society or to Islam. birth and, as such, can be punBut other equally devout ished for violations of Islamic law Malays have called for stiff punand custom. Malays who reishment for Pin and his follownounce Islam can be disowned by ers. family members, lose their jobs, The infamous giant teapot, or kendul, signified the purity of It is estimated that there are be harassed by the authorities, or mankind, a sacred vessel that dispenses God’s blessings. currently only several thousand jailed for “deviations against followers of the Sky Kingdom. Islam.” Of the 50 people originally arBecause Ayah Pin was born a Muslim, Still, this did not protect them from inrested, the Shariah court was lenient with he was subject to the rulings of Malaysia’s creasing legal pressure. In 2005, the Sky 40 who chose to renounce their affiliaIslamic courts. And the courts of TerengKingdom compound was destroyed by tion with the group, were underage, or ganu state, where the Sky Kingdom’s bulldozers and 49 of Pin’s followers were foreign. Today, only 24 people remain at headquarters were located, are among the arrested during a raid by police and the site of the commune, all of who are most conservative in Malaysia. Shariah (Islamic Court) authorities. The understandably suspicious of outsiders. Not only is Pin a Muslim in the eyes of Sky Kingdom had great difficulty finding In February of 2008, Kamariah Ali, a forMalaysian courts, so are many of his follegal representation, as most Malaysian mer religious teacher and Sky Kingdom lowers. Under Malaysian law, attempting law firms refused to represent them for member, was sentenced to two years in to convert Muslims to another religion is fear of vigilante reprisals. (Three months prison for the crime of apostasy. z I WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM 33 From the Skies Byrd and the UFOs of ‘47 Over the years, rumors have circulated about the true purpose of the largest Antarctic military expedition ever organized. And some of these rumors question the possible connection with the first major UFO sighting in the U.S. and the beginning of the modern UFO era. 34 by Tim Swartz t the end of World War II, Admiral Richard E. Byrd was considered a relic of a more romantic time when there were still parts of the world that remained unexplored. Nevertheless, in 1946, Admiral D.C. Ramsey, chief of naval operations, created the Antarctic Developments Project with the 58-year-old Byrd as leader of the expedition. Even though the Antarctic Developments Project (code-named “Operation Highjump”) was publicly called an exploration and research operation, the basic objectives were not scientific or economic—they were military. History tells us that Operation Highjump was simply an expedition of discovery to Antarctica that also included a unique opportunity to test out military equipment in the harsh Antarctic envi- A ronment. However, from the very beginning, there were elements about the mission that seemed unusual. For instance, for a mission of exploration and discovery, Operation Highjump used an amazing number of military personnel, ships, planes, and even a submarine. Three Naval battle groups included 12 ships, the submarine USS Sennet, six R4-D (military version of the DC-3) transport planes, and over 4,000 men. The central group of Operation Highjump reached the Bay of Whales on January 15, 1947, and established Little America IV, complete with three runways. The aircraft carrier Philippine Sea carried six R4-D transport aircraft and Admiral Byrd to the edge of the ice pack. The R4-Ds successfully took off from the flight deck of the Philippine Sea and reached Little America six hours later. M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 From the Skies withdrew from the program after only eight weeks. History books state that he left because every objective had been met and Byrd saw no reason to remain. But newspaper and personal accounts taken from those who actually participated in the operation tell a different story. BYRD Antarctic Explorer A dmiral Richard E. Byrd was the perfect choice to lead a mission to Antarctica. Interested in polar exploration since he was a young boy, in 1926, he took leave from the Navy to organize a privately financed expedition to the Arctic. Supported by Edsel Ford, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., the New York Times, and others, Byrd and pilot Floyd Bennett flew over the North Pole on May 9, 1926. Both men were awarded the Medal of Honor after their return to the United States. Byrd next turned his attention to Antarctica, where he conducted expeditions that accounted for the discovery of hundreds of thousands of square miles of territory which he claimed for the U.S. He flew over the South Pole in 1929. He then spent most of the winter of 1934 alone in a hut some 100 miles into the interior. This effort almost cost Byrd his life when he was poisoned by carbon monoxide fumes. Nevertheless, no other person in Antarctic history has contributed more to the geographic discovery of the continent than Admiral Byrd. —TIM SWARTZ The R4-Ds then conducted extensive aerial mapping that included a two-aircraft flight to the South Pole. Although the original mission statement declared that the operation would last four months, Byrd unexpectedly WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM A Secret Nazi Base n March 5, 1947, the El Mercurio newspaper of Santiago, Chile reported that: “Adm. Byrd declared today that it was imperative for the United States to initiate immediate defense measures against hostile regions. Furthermore, Byrd stated that he “didn’t want to frighten anyone unduly” but that it was “a bitter reality that in case of a new war the continental United States would be attacked by flying objects which could fly from pole to pole at incredible speeds.” Before a news conference, Byrd then repeated each of these points. Because of Byrd’s statements to the press, rumors began to circulate that the true mission of Operation Highjump had been to investigate, photograph, and possibly even invade an alleged secret Nazi base located in Queen Mauds Land of Antarctica. This rumor was actually not so farfetched. At the end of the war, the Allies had determined 250,000 high-level Germans were unaccounted for. Nazi scientists and intelligence officials, who had been brought into the U.S. as part of Project Paperclip—a secret program to use former Nazis to assist the United States in the growing cold war with the Soviet Union—had reported that, during the war, the Nazis had spent several years sending materials and supplies to Antarctica in order to build a secret military base. Known as Base 211, this base would supposedly work in conjunction with Nazi enclaves in South America to offer the ultimate safe haven for high- O ranking Nazi officials, scientists, and top secret technology. One of the allegations made about the abrupt ending of Operation Highjump was that the flights searching for Base 211 were repeatedly harassed by strange flying objects known at the time as “FooFighters.” These strange lights, thought to be some sort of Nazi secret weapon, were reported by Allied pilots over the Rhineland starting in the autumn of 1944. Now they were being seen in the skies of Antarctica, following the reconnaissance aircraft and possibly even interfering with their onboard controls, resulting in several crashes and deaths. Faced with their inability to pinpoint the exact location of Base 211—and by the apparent superiority of the mysterious, unidentified aircraft—Admiral Byrd ordered the mission to withdraw in 1947. In the end, the taskforce returned to the U.S. with their data, which then immediately became classified top secret. As well, Byrd was soon hospitalized for exhaustion and not allowed to hold any press conferences. The story might have ended there except it seems that the same mysterious aircraft that harassed Operation Highjump in Antarctica followed them back to the United States. Just a few months later, on June 21, 1947, pilot Kenneth Arnold spotted a fleet of strange wing-shaped objects flying near Mt. Rainer, WA (later erroneously dubbed “flying saucers” by a reporter). Then, around July 3, 1947, something, crashed in the desert near Roswell, NM. After that, UFOs, as they were now called, were seen flying the skies of the U.S., and later, other countries, with apparent impunity. It would be nice if there were a tidy resolution to this mystery. Unfortunately, when it comes to UFOs, there are no easy answers. It is safe to say, however, that what we think we know about UFOs and their history may be a lot more complex than we ever imagined. z 35 crypto corral A New York ABC n April 19, 2008, Tsermaa Plumley heard an intruder rummaging through the compost heap outside her home in Keene, NY. Peering through the window at the visitor, she told her husband, “It’s a huge black cat!” Dan Plumley grabbed his camera and rushed outside to confront a “black panther.” Later, speaking to the Lake Placid News, he said, “This must have been an exotic pet that had gotten too big for its owners. … It had to be four and a half to five feet long from its head to the tail. I judged its length in comparison to the driveway.” O New Species Discovered n May of 2008, researchers announced their discovery of a new gecko family whose scientific name Phyllodactylidae (“leaf toe”) describes the shape of their toes. Two months after that announcement, another team led by Dr. Ute Radespiel at the University of Veterinary Medicine in Hanover, Germany, announced discovery of a new mouse lemur species on Madagascar, named Microcebus macarthurii, after the MacArthur Foundation which funded the research. I Nessie Captured on Film? t Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands, July 2008 produced a new videotape of Nessie, the world-famous Loch Ness Monster. The tape was actually made in April by David and Graham Garside of Slaithwaite, Huddersfield, who were enjoying a cruise on Loch Ness when David spotted “something strange” in the distance and zoomed in with his camera. The Garside tape is currently available for viewing on YouTube. While the Scots debated the existence of Nessie, reports of a three-foot crocodilian emerged from Pluck Lake in Swansea, Wales. Police received the first call at noon on April 27, 2008. On April 29, fisherman Steve Jenkins saw the creature. As he described, “It was definitely a crocodile. There was a white van submerged in the water and it swam over the top of it so I had a good look. It was a meter long and had a long tail.” A 36 The cat soon fled and has not reappeared in Keene, but the Plumley sighting is far from unique. According to John Lutz, founder and head of the Eastern Puma Research Network, New Yorkers logged 245 black panther sightings between 1960 and 2005. Lutz believes those cats are melanistic cougars, but that solution poses a riddle in itself, since New York’s last acknowledged wild cougar was killed in 1894. Nonetheless, Lutz claims that there have been more than 1,000 cougar sightings in the Empire State over the past quarter-century, including more than 70 cases of adult cats seen with cubs. Bend It Like Yeti B ritish wildlife artist Polyanna Pickering produced a policestyle “photo-fit” drawing of the elusive Himalayan yeti in June, 2008—and she credits it, at least in part, to soccer star David Beckham! Pickering was on a private yeti hunt in Bhutan when she approached a remote monastery. The site’s sole occupant was a monk, who proved to be both a proud anglophile and an obsessive David Beckham fan. Pickering explained her mission after talking soccer, and the monk produced a supposed 100-year-old yeti scalp. Pickering told London reporter Richard Holt, “I was told this was from a Migoi, their name for the yeti. All I know is, it was bigger than any human or ape scalp I have ever seen. It had tufts of reddishblack fur coming out of it and was mounted on a pole and seen as a holy relic.” Aside from tufts of hair, the scalp also had shards of bone attached. Monastery regulations forbade taking photos of the scalp, but Pickering sketched it, then expanded her drawing into a full-body likeness. She also collected numerous local eyewitness accounts of the creature, suggesting that it is well-known to Bhutanese natives. “I was amazed,” she said, “when they told me of regular sightings, close encounters, and even tales of people being carried off by the Migoi. Their descriptions were so detailed, I ended up doing this ‘photo-fit’ with them all sitting round telling me to alter this or how that should look.” Jonathan Downes, founder and head of Europe’s Centre for Fortean Zoology, told the Telegraph, “This is potentially explosive. If this scalp is authentic and has bone still attached, it will probably be the single most important zoological find since the discovery of the coelacanth.” —MICHAEL NEWTON M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 crypto corral Panther Hunting in US A Colossal Calamari he capture of a rare colossal squid (Mesonychoteuthis hamiltoni) made global headlines in 2007. When it was hauled aboard the fishing vessel San Aspiring, it tipped the scales at 1,090 pounds and measured 26-33 feet long (estimates varied). Once frozen and transported to the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, however, its tentacles began to shrink. By the time it was defrosted and dissected in May 2008, the specimen measured only 14 feet. Furthermore, researchers discovered that the squid they had identified as female was, in fact, a male. Still, the squid was no disappointment. Its partially collapsed eyeball measured 10.63 inches in diameter, suggesting that it would have been 12-16 inches wide in life, the largest eye of any creature known to science. Nor is the present specimen the largest known colossal squid. Its beak measures 1.7 inches long, but other beaks retrieved from sperm whale innards have topped two inches, suggesting that their owners exceeded 46 feet overall. T Argentina’s Dogsucker he cryptid known as el chupacabra (“the goat-sucker,” in Spanish) first appeared in Puerto Rico, then moved on from there to infest most of Latin America, several parts of the United States, and isolated beachheads in Europe. Descriptions of the creature vary widely, and so does its taste for domestic T WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM t 6 a.m. on May 19, 2008, Missouri sheriff’s deputy Donn Hall shot and killed a domesticated black panther which had tried to invade a woman’s rural home outside Neosho, in Newton County. Captain Richard Leavens was skeptical when his department received the 911 distress call but it took two blasts from Hall’s 12-gauge shotgun, plus 10 rounds from his .45-caliber Glock 21 automatic pistol, to finish off the big cat. Agents from Missouri’s Department of Conservation were summoned to examine the threefoot-long, 60-pound carcass. They determined that the “panther”—actually a melanistic leopard—was an immature male that had been surgically de-clawed. That operation marked the cat as a former pet or occupant of some menagerie, but the information brought police no closer to identifying its one-time keeper(s). A different explanation was advanced for the black panther seen at northern California’s Point Reyes National Seashore, north of San Francisco, in April of 2008. Hiker John Balawejder—who, with his daughter Alani, saw the cat and has prepared an academic paper on the incident—believes it was a melanistic cougar or mountain lion. “This lion was not darkish, not a brownish-tawny like some I’ve seen, but jet black,” Balawejder told the San Francisco Chronicle. Despite his confidence, most zoologists deny the existence of melanistic cougars, noting that no confirmed specimen has ever been captured or killed. But witness Don Callen snapped three photos of a supposed black cougar on his 52acre Santa Rosa property in late April, using a stationary digital camera from a range of 50 feet. Case closed? Hardly! Jack Dumbacher, a curator at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco, examined Callen’s photographs and ranked them as “enticing,” but ultimately inconclusive. “That would be a really exciting find, if that’s what it was,” Dumbacher allowed, but he suggested that the creature in Callen’s photos might also be a large domestic house cat. —MICHAEL NEWTON animals. Goats have never been the chupacabra’s only victims, but it seemed noteworthy to Argentinean journalists when a mystery mauler in Rosario (Santa Fe Province) revealed an appetite for dogs. The attack occurred on May 1, 2008 when a Rosario resident heard his dogs barking in the pre-dawn hours. He ignored them, and when he finally went out to check the dogs at noon, he found one dog lying dead beneath a patio grill, drained of blood through a deep puncture wound in its neck. Strangely, no bloodstains appeared on the ground. The local newspaper La Capital reported that sheriff ’s officers filed a report on the case and delivered the dog’s carcass to Argentina’s Instituto Medico Legal for a necropsy. At press time, no verdict had been announced. —MICHAEL NEWTON 37 crypto corral Bigfoot on Ice! O n July 9, 2008—prison guard Rick Dyer and sheriff’s deputy Matthew Whitton— proclaimed through YouTube videos that they had found a Bigfoot carcass in the woods and had it frozen in a block of ice. They were prepared to share it with the world… but for a price. How much? For starters, Dyer and Whitton offered Bigfoot safaris to the site where they had found the corpse, beginning at $499 a head. Word quickly spread that Tom Biscardi, CEO of Searching for Bigfoot Inc. (shown here), had paid Dyer and Whitton $50,000 as “a good faith gesture,” in exchange for permission to view the remains. The story went global on August 15, when Biscardi staged a press conference to herald the discovery. “I want to get to the bottom of it,” Biscardi told the cameras. “I’ll tell you what I’ve seen and what I’ve touched and what I’ve felt, what I’ve prodded was not a mask sewed onto a bear hide, OK?” Dyer warned skeptics, “They don’t have a choice to believe us. We have a body.” But veteran Sasquatch trackers were not so sure. They still recalled Biscardi’s promotion of alleged Bigfoot photos faked by hoaxer Ivan Marx, in the 1973 issue of Saga magazine. When author William Childress suggested that the photos might depict a man in an ape suit—and a poorly fitted one, at that—Biscardi replied, “You’re looking at the clearest pictures of a Sasquatch ever taken… And we’re going find him.” They did not, but in 2005, Biscardi claimed another triumph. Appearing on George Noory’s Coast to Coast AM radio program, Biscardi said that he was “98 percent sure that his group would capture the Bigfoot they have been tracking. A month later, Biscardi said he had access to a captive Bigfoot and was setting up a pay-per-view TV event to film it. Then days later, came the truth: there was no Bigfoot. Biscardi blamed an unknown mental patient for misleading him and criticized Noory’s listeners for their own gullibility. Strike two. But was he being truthful this time? Early results of DNA testing on hair allegedly plucked from the carcass, performed by biologist Curt Nelson at the University of Minnesota, revealed that the samples had come from an opossum. Disappointed with that scientific finding, Dyer and Whitten shipped their frozen specimen off to Steve Kulls, host of B l o g Ta l k R a d i o ’ s “Squatch Detective” program. As Kulls thawed out the “creature,” he “observed the foot, which looked unnatural, reached in and confirmed it was a rubber foot.” The rest, revealed by inches, proved to be a tricked-out ape suit. Biscardi, reached by telephone, told Kulls that Dyer and Whitton “had admitted the corpse was a costume.” The stunt cost Whitton his job, as Clayton County Sheriff Jeff Turner told reporters, “This is basically a disgrace to be in law enforcement. You must have integrity. He has none.” As for Biscardi, confusion deepened when spokesmen for the Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization (BFRO) declared that he “didn’t start this hoax, but instead latched onto to it once it was presented to him by his dubious associate Steve Kulls.” Kulls, in turn, blamed Rick Dyer for that charge and urged his listeners to consider the source. —MICHAEL NEWTON 38 M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 The Best Paranormal Talk Radio on the Web Sunday, 9:30 p.m. EST and Thursday, 10 p.m. EST Hosted by EPIC co-founder Jeremiah Greer, who has over 12 years experience in paranormal research and investigations. SHADOWS IN THE DARK www.ShadowsintheDarkRadio.com www.blogtalkradio.com/shadowsinthedark The tower was originally designed with two floors and had a fireplace carved into the wall on the second story. 40 M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 America’s Oldest Mystery THE NEWPORT TOWER N ewport, RI, has long been famous as the summer playground for the fabulously wealthy. But nestled amongst the luxurious mansions and the private yachts is a mysterious stone tower whose history has baffled historians for centuries. It is believed to be the oldest stone structure in America, though no one can say precisely when it was built. This imposing structure is situated on a steep hill that dominates the entrance to Narragansett Bay. At first glance, it appears to have been lifted directly from medieval Europe. Its ornate circular walls rise 24 feet into the air, supported on an intricate base of octagonal pillars and sweeping Romanesque arches. But why does this old tower inspire so much controversy and debate? Simply put, it may end up rewriting western history as we know it. by Mark S. Longo WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM 41 One of the oldest and most persistent theories about the tower is that it was built by ancient Norse explorers, long before Columbus arrived on America’s shore. This theory has been a favorite of Newport locals for centuries, but it gained international prominence when an armored skeleton was discovered in 1831 in nearby Fall River, MA. First believed to be the remains of a Viking explorer, the skeleton was later determined to be the remains of a local Wampanoag indian. But that did little to stem the Viking frenzy then sweeping across the nation. The clamor over the skeleton was so intense that it inspired Henry Wadsworth Longfellow to write his epic poem “The Skeleton in the Armor,” which he crafted to sound like a Norse saga. Three weeks we westward bore, And when the storm was o’er, Cloud-like we saw the shore Stretching to the leeward; There for my lady’s bower Built I the lofty tower, Which, to this very hour, Stands looking seaward. There lived we many years; Time dried the maiden’s tears She had forgot her fears, She was a mother. Death closed her mild blue eyes, Under that tower she lies; Ne’er shall the sun arise On such another! Since the poem’s first publication in 1841, a wealth of evidence has since emerged to support the Viking theory, including the bizarre unit of measurement that was used to design the tower: the ell. Unlike most American structures, the tower is not built around the English foot, or any other widely recognized unit of measurement. Instead, it was designed using an ancient Scottish measurement known as the ell. The ell equates to three Norse feet and was a common measurement used by Vikings. Another strong piece of evidence is the shape of the tower itself. The remains of round towers that are supported by eight pillars have been found in churches in both Denmark and Norway. This has led to speculation that Catholic Norsemen built the 42 Newport Tower as it looked in the 18th and and early 19th centuries. tower for use as a church during an early expedition to Narragansett Bay. More evidence has been found in the form of apparent runic inscriptions that were carved into rocks throughout New England which, although still hotly debated, some claim were carved by Norse explorers. (See Mysteries, issue #6) Local Narragansett tribesmen have also added fuel to the Viking theory. According to tribal legends, the tower was built by redheaded men with green eyes who sailed up the river on strange-looking ships. These mysterious voyages were also believed to have taken place centuries before the first English settlers arrived in the area in the 17th century. Although the Viking theory has remained popular over the years, it is only one of many. An even more outlandish theory claims that the tower was built by the Knights Templar, almost a century before Columbus’ voyage to the New World. This fascinating tale begins in the 12th century, when Europe was at the height of its crusading frenzy. M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 The Templar Theory hile the Templars’ reputation as fierce crusaders is well known, most people are unaware that they were also the first modern bankers. The Templars allowed pilgrims to deposit valuables in preceptories throughout Europe, before beginning their hazardous journey to the Holy Land. These pilgrims were then given a chit with which to withdraw their funds when they reached their destination. By the beginning of the 14th century, the Templars’ elaborate financial system had transformed the Order into one of the wealthiest and most powerful organizations in Europe. However, their immense wealth eventually drew the attention of Phillip the Fair, the cash-strapped King of France. Phillip had borrowed great sums from the Order to finance his military campaigns. In order to avoid paying off these debts, he ordered his men to arrest the Templars on October 13, 1307. (It was a Friday, hence our modern fear of Friday the 13th.) While most of the Templars were tortured and eventually burned at the stake, a small number managed to escape Paris by ship. Their ultimate destination is still hotly debated, although many historians believe that Scotland is the most likely choice. Scotland’s King Robert the Bruce was not loyal to the Catholic Church, and he was desperately in need of men with combat experience who could help train his men and join his forces in his war with England. He would have undoubtedly welcomed the Templars into his country with open arms. During their time in Scotland, the Templars abandoned their old name and came under the protection of the Scottish noble family of the Sinclairs. The Sinclairs were a dominant force in Scottish politics who had a long history of naval exploration from their home in the Orkney Islands. They were also the patrons of the Freemasons, a secretive organization that would go on to adopt many of the rituals and traditions of the Knights Templar. In 1365, Prince Henry Sinclair took up the Templar mantle and joined King Peter of Cyprus’ bloody crusade to Egypt. Known for making naval voyages throughout the Orkney, Shetland, and Faeroe Islands, in 1398, Henry launched a naval expedition to explore the lands west of Scotland. His jour- W WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM ney was recorded by Venetian shipmate Antonio Zeno. Zeno’s letters, which were published in 1558, described landmarks and native tribes that were indigenous to North America. More recently, evidence of a possible Sinclair presence in North America was then found carved into a rock in Westford, MA, which bears the image of a knight in full plate armor. The style of the knight’s armor is similar to the type worn during Henry Sinclair’s voyage and the knight’s shield bears the heraldic symbol of the Scottish Gunn clan, a close relation and ally of the Sinclairs. Additional evidence of Sinclair’s voyage to North America can be found in Rosslyn Chapel in Scotland, which was built by the Sinclair family in 1446. The chapel’s walls are adorned with carvings of corn, a vegetable that was not introduced to Europe until Columbus’ voyage nearly 50 years after the chapel was built. (See Mysteries, issue #1) Some scholars also believe that the Newport tower’s architecture is proof of Templar involvement in its construction. The tower’s round design, complete with a fireplace carved into the second story, is reminiscent of another round tower with a high fireplace in the St. Clair church in Corstorphine, Scotland, which was built by the Sinclair family. It is also the burial site of Prince Henry’s daughter. In addition, the use of the Scottish ell in the tower’s construction suggests that a Scotsman, or at least someone familiar with their measurements, was present when the tower was built. Theories abound as to why Henry Sinclair may have built the tower. Some believe that he constructed it as a reminder to future generations of the ways of the Templar Order. Others believe that he built it to be used as a church during their stay in the area. Still others suggest that it was built to defend against Indian attacks or to serve as a lookout for approaching ships. Along with the true reason for the tower’s construction, the real motive behind Sinclair’s perilous voyage to the New World remains a mystery. Templar legends claim that a handful of knights sailed to America to prevent the Order’s greatest possession, the Holy Grail, from falling into the hands of their enemies. This belief has motivated treasure hunters for generations, to search the many islands along Sinclair’s suspected route, including Oak Island near Nova Scotia for Templar treas- 43 ure. (See Mysteries issue #17). However, a different version of the Templar theory has emerged over the past century, one that claims that the Templar builders of the tower came not from Scotland but from Portugal. One theory suggests that the Newport Tower is actually the remains of a windmill built by Benedict Arnold, the Governor of Rhode Island and the great-grandfather of the famous Revolutionary War traitor. He is believed to have drawn inspiration for the tower from this windmill in Chesterton, England. The Order of Christ Theory s part of the Reconquista against the Moors, the Templar Order was active in Spain and Portugal during the 12th and 13th centuries. During their long years of war, the Templars filled the Portuguese countryside with circular towers and rotundas that were supported by eight arches, a design meant to remind the brethren of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. (Examples of these structures can still be seen today at the imposing Templar fortresses in Tomar, Zezere, Pombal, Almoural, Idanha, and Monsanto.) The Templars’ struggle to liberate Portugal from the Moors soon won them high regard throughout the country. When the French king began his crackdown on the Order in 1307, the Portuguese king refused to follow suit. As a result, Portugal was soon flooded with Templar refugees from all over Europe. In order to avoid further persecution, in 1320, the Portuguese Templars changed A The Templar stronghold at Tomar, Portugal, boasts of a circular tower that is similar in style to the Newport Tower. 44 their name to the Order of Christ. Realizing that their expansion opportunities in Europe were limited, the Templars began to take an active interest in naval exploration. Their coffers financed a number of Portuguese naval expeditions. In fact, many prominent Portuguese explorers, including Ferdinand Magellan and Vasco da Gama, were members of the Order of Christ. Evidence for a possible Portuguese presence in New England was found on Dighton Rock in Berkley, MA. The strange carvings and ancient symbols carved there have baffled scholars for centuries. In 1917, Professor Edmund Burke Delabarre transM YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 NEW THEORIES N ew theories about the mysterious tower continue to emerge every year. One new study, conducted by Rhode Island astronomy professor William Penhallow, suggests that the tower is a pre-Colonial structure that was built to track the movements of the sun and the moon. As with other celestially oriented structures, adherents of this theory believe that the Newport tower was used to determine the proper times for harvests and other major events. However, the most startling new theory was raised in 2003 by Gavin Menzies, who claims that the tower is actually a lighthouse built by Zheng He (shown here), a 15th-century Chinese explorer. He based this assessment on a comparison between the Newport Tower and a Chinese lighthouse located in the port of Zaiton. The Newport Tower and the Zaiton Lighthouse both have octagonal bases and they both consist of grey stone shells that were once covered by plaster. In addition, both the Zaiton Lighthouse and the Newport Tower were constructed using similar units of measurement. lated the symbols to reveal the date “1511” and the name “Miguel de Cortereal.” A Portuguese coat-of-arms was also discovered on the rock, which was taken as evidence that the Portuguese explorer Miguel de Cortereal, who vanished in the early part of the 16th century, was shipwrecked in the area and built the Newport tower as a lighthouse to signal rescue ships. This theory was given extra weight in 1921, when a grave containing five skeletons, a cannon, and a sword was discovered in Charlestown, RI. The sword was later identified as a Spanish blade from the 15th century while the cannon was identified as a WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM Portuguese breechloader from the early 16th century. The Benedict Arnold Theory he Viking and Templar theories make for compelling tales, but they are based on controversial evidence that has yet to win over many mainstream critics. A more mundane theory suggests that the tower is actually the remains of a windmill that was built by Benedict Arnold, the Governor of Rhode Island and the great-grandfather of the famous Revolutionary War traitor, in the mid-17th century. The Arnold theory is based on a single T line from the governor’s 1677 will that referred to the tower as “my stone-builte windmiln.” He also is believed to have drawn inspiration for the tower windmill from an almost identical structure in Chesterton, England, and several scientific studies of the Newport Tower have lent this theory credence. In the late 1940s, an archaeological dig around the tower failed to find any Norse or medieval European tools or artifacts—only Colonial-era items were recovered from the dig. Then in 1993, a team of Danish researchers carbon dated the tower’s mortar to the mid-17th century, precisely the time that Arnold was supposed to have built his windmill. However, these findings did not put an end to the debate over who originally built the tower. Critics say that the mortar was installed during a 17th-century restoration. These claims are based on an archaeological dig that was conducted in the late 1940s by the Society of American Archaeology. This dig found Colonial-era masonry tools and timbers in the ground around the tower, suggesting that the tower was once surrounded by a wooden structure similar to those used in restorations. These critics have also raised questions about the accuracy of the carbon-14 testing. The actual range of dates produced by the tests was from 1410 to 1970, so the mid1600s date was determined by comparison with a control sample taken from a nearby 17th-century house. In addition to questions about the scientific findings, two other questions about the Arnold theory remain unanswered. If the tower is a Colonial structure, then why was not the English foot used in its construction? In addition, why would anyone put a fireplace in a windmill that was used to store highly flammable grain dust? Will the truth about this bizarre structure ever be known? Perhaps not, but the mystery is part of the tower’s enduring appeal. It is impossible to walk through the tranquil streets of Newport and not be intoxicated by the idea that the Vikings, Chinese, or even the Knights Templar may have walked that same ground centuries earlier. In a country whose origins date back only a few hundred years, it is exciting to think that a true wonder of world history may be sitting right under our very noses. z 45 Was there a Golden Age? Historical Proof for the Garden of Eden 46 M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 A lmost all of the ancient cultures of Europe, the Middle East, and Asia have myths which speak of an earlier time when life was easier and humans lived in harmony with nature and each other. Most historians believe that these myths are little more than fairy tale, perhaps the result of our need to idealize the past. However, there is now evidence that suggests that these myths may contain a kernel of historical truth, a kind of distant folk memory of an actual historical era. by Steve Taylor WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM 47 Some of these myths describe a sudden and dramatic fall from grace, as in the biblical story of the Garden of Eden. The ancient Iranians have a similar myth that developed independently of the Bible story that describes how the first man, Yima, lived in a walled garden called Paira-daeza, from which the English word “paradise” comes, on a mountain where the water of life flowed and the tree of life grew. It was in a perfect country with a mild climate, where the people knew, “neither heat nor cold, neither old age or death, nor disease… Father and son walked together, each looking but 15 years of age.” But this perfect age came to an abrupt end when Airyana Vaejo changed the mild climate to a harsh one, destroying the garden with snow and ice. Other myths speak of a long and slow degeneration over many eras. For instance, Greek poet Hesiod in around 800 BC, described an age when a “golden race” of human beings lived with, “hearts free from sorrow and remote from toil or grief… The fruitful earth spontaneously bore them abundant fruit without stint. And they lived in ease and peace upon their lands with many good things.” This Golden Age was followed by the Ages of Silver, Brass, Heroes, and the present age of Iron. Through each age, human nature became more corrupt and life became more difficult and full of suffering. In India there is similar view of history. According to traditional Hindu folklore, time moves cyclically through four different yugas or ages. According to the Vaya Purana, during the first age, the Krita Yuga (or Perfect Age): “Human beings appropriated food which was produced from the essence of the earth… They frequented the mountains and seas, and did not dwell in houses. They never sorrowed, were full of the quality of goodness, and supremely happy; they moved about at will and lived in continual delight… There existed among them no such things as gain or loss, friendship or enmity, or like or dislike.” Since then, however, history has moved through the three succeeding ages to the present Kali Yuga (Age of Darkness), in which human beings are materialistic, law48 less, and decadent. In fact, this age, as it is described in the Vishnu Purana, sounds like a fairly accurate description of the the modern world: “Accumulated treasures will be spent on dwellings. The minds of men will be solely preoccupied with acquiring wealth; and wealth will be spent on selfish gratifications.” Further east in China, the story of humanity’s fall from grace appears in the form of the myth of the “Age of Perfect Virtue.” During this time, humans were naturally part of the Tao, the natural harmony or order of nature and the universe. As Chuang Tzu wrote in the fourth century BC, in the Age of Perfect Virtue, people were: “right and correct… [They] did not rebel against want, did not grow proud in plenty. Being like this, they could commit an error and not regret it, could meet with success and not make it a show.” But since then, the Chinese believe that humans have become separated from the Tao, selfish and calculating, rather than spontaneous. As a result, laws and rulers have become necessary to keep our selfishness and greed in check. The Myth of Prehistoric Misery f someone asked you to imagine how humans lived 20,000 years ago, you would probably think of hairy savages living in caves, carrying around clubs and grunting at each other, fighting against nature to survive, with no protection against the elements, disease, or wild animals. They must have spent their short lives on the verge of starvation, fighting with other tribes over food and land, and with each other over food and power. Life only began to get easier—so the traditional view of history goes—once some groups in the Middle East developed agriculture around 10,000 years ago. This meant that people could settle down in one area, control their own food supply, and develop more sophisticated cultures. Ever since then, it is commonly believed that the human race has been steadily becoming more enlightened and sophisticated. However, over the last few decades, archaeologists and anthropologists have discovered that the lives of prehistoric humans I were a lot easier than those of the agricultural peoples who came after them. Until around 8,000 BC, all humans lived as hunter-gatherers and survived by hunting wild animals and foraging for nuts, fruit, and vegetables. When anthropologists began to look at how contemporary hunter-gatherers used their time, they were surprised to find that they only spent 12 to 20 hours per week searching for food, between a third and a half of the average modern work week! Strange though it may sound, the diet of hunter-gatherers was better than many modern peoples. Apart from the small amount of meat they ate (10%-20% of their diet), their diet was practically identical to that of a modern-day vegan—no dairy products and a wide variety of fruits, vegetables, roots, and nuts, all eaten raw (which nutrition experts say is the healthiest way to eat). This partly explains why skeletons of ancient hunter-gatherers are surprisingly large and robust and show few signs of degenerative diseases and tooth decay. The hunter-gatherers of Greece and Turkey had an average height of five feet ten inches for men and five feet six for women. But after the advent of agriculture, these declined to five feet three and five feet one. Likewise, an archaeological site in the lower Illinois Valley in central USA shows that when people started cultivating maize and switched to a settled lifestyle, there was an increase in infant mortality, stunted growth in adults, and a massive increase in diseases related to malnutrition. Hunter-gatherers were also much less vulnerable to disease than later peoples. In fact, until the advances of modern medicine and hygiene of the 19th and 20th centuries, they may well have suffered less from disease than any other humans in history. In fact, many of the diseases which we are now susceptible to only actually arrived when we domesticated animals. Pigs and ducks passed the flu on, horses gave us colds, cows gave us the pox, and dogs gave us the measles. And later, when dairy products became a part of our diet, we increased our exposure to disease even more through drinking milk, which transmitted at least 30 different diseases. In view of this, it is not surprising that with the coming of agriculture, people’s lifespans became shorter. M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 It is significant that the Bible tells us that the Fall occurred as a result of Eve eating from the apple of knowledge and that Adam and Eve then “realized that they were naked so they sewed fig leaves together and covered themselves.” This suggests that the Fall was linked to the development of a new self-awareness, which gave them the ability to observe and judge themselves. WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM 49 Peacefulness and Egalitarianism rchaeological evidence also suggests that the prehistoric hunter-gatherers were not war-like; in fact, there are only two indisputable cases of group violence during all of these tens of thousands of years. A cluster of sites around the Nile Valley show some signs of violence from around 12,000 BC. And in southeast Australia, there are some signs of inter-tribal fighting—as well as of other kinds of social violence such as the cranial deformation of children—at several different sites dating from 11,000 and 7,000 BC. The lack of evidence for warfare is striking. There are no signs of violent death, no evidence of damage or disruption by warfare, and although many other artifacts have been found, including massive numbers of tools and pots, there is a complete absence of weapons. Archaeologists have also discovered over 300 cave prehistoric “art galleries,” not one of which contains depictions of warfare, weapons, or warriors. Additionally, the fact that women provided so much of the tribe’s food strongly suggests that they had equal status, as it is A difficult to see how they could have low status while performing such an important economic role. The healthy, open attitude that ancient hunter-gatherers had toward the human body and to sex—shown by the massive numbers of sexually explicit images and objects archaeologists have discovered—suggests that the oppression of women appears to be closely linked to a sense of alienation from the human body and a negative attitude to instincts and bodily processes. Contemporary indigenous peoples were sexually egalitarian, too. Before European conquest and colonization, many of them traced descent and ownership of property through the mother’s rather than the father’s side of the family. And as anthropologist Tim Ingold notes, in “immediate return” hunter-gatherer societies (that is, societies that lived by immediately using any food or other resources they collected, rather than storing them for later use), women usually chose their own marriage partners, decided what work they wanted to do and worked whenever they chose. And if a marriage broke down, they had custody rights over their children. Moreover, in prehistoric societies there were no different classes or castes, with people who had more power and possessions than others. For archaeologists, the most obvious signs of social inequality are differences in graves in terms of size, position, and the goods which are placed inside them. Later agricultural societies had larger, more central graves for more important people, and had more possessions inside them; men also generally had more grave goods than women. But the graves of the ancient hunter-gatherers are strikingly uniform, with little or no size differences and no grave wealth. Additionally, hunter-gatherers were also strikingly democratic, as decisions were made in co-operation with other respected members of the group. Transition to Agriculture vidence from artwork, cemeteries, and battlesites suggests that there was an eruption of warfare, male domination, and social oppression during the fourth millennium BC, in the Middle East and central Asia. It may be, then, that these ancient myths of a Golden Age were E Objects archaeologists have discovered suggest that the oppression of women was closely linked to a sense of alienation from the human body and a negative attitude to instincts and bodily processes. 50 M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 developed by peoples from these areas, people who were living a hard, agricultural way of life, suffering from a whole host of new diseases, and in constant danger of attack by invaders. It is hardly surprising, then, that they looked back nostalgically to the peaceful, leisurely life of their huntergatherer ancestors. There are certainly references to the transition from the hunter-gatherer way of life to agriculture in the myths. For example, Hesiod stated that during the Golden Age, “the fruitful earth bore them abundant fruit without stint,” and the Vaya Purana commented that “They frequented the mountains and seas and did not dwell in houses” (i.e. they lived a non-sedentary way of life). The Vaya Purana also commented that during this perfect age, “the things which those people desired sprang up from the earth everywhere and always.” Similarly, Hesiod’s phrase “remote from toil” hints at the leisure-filled lives of the hunter-gatherers while the Vaya Purana’s comment that there were “no such things as gain or loss” suggests a lack of property and materialism. But perhaps the clearest mythical description of the hunter-gatherer way of life comes from the fourth-century BC Greek philosopher Decaearchus. According to his fellow philosopher Porphyry, Decaearchus spoke of “men in the earliest age,” who lived at a time when all things grew spontaneously, since the men of that time produced nothing, having invented neither agriculture nor any other art. It was for this reason that they lived a life of leisure, without care or toil, and also—if the doctrine of the most eminent medical men is to be accepted—without disease. What Went Wrong ut what about the transition from peacefulness to conflict, or from egalitarianism to oppression? The myths also give hints that environmental factors were involved. In both the Iranian and the Biblical myths of humanity’s Fall, the first human beings lived in a lush, fertile environment which they were forced to leave. In the Iranian myth, the climate changed and the walled garden became barren, so that its inhabitants could no longer survive there. During the fourth millennium BC, a B WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM massive environmental change occurred throughout the Middle East and Central Asia. Prior to this, the area had been fertile and full of animal and plant life, and supported a large number of settled agricultural communities. But when the moisture began to dissipate, it created a massive belt of arid desert which runs from the Steppes of southern Russia to the Arabian and Iranian deserts. The groups who lived in the area, including the original Indo-Europeans and Semitic peoples, were forced to flee. The eruption of warfare and social oppression occurred at exactly the same time as this environmental disaster, involving the very same groups who were forced to leave their homelands. In some way, this desertification of their lands seems to have changed the psyche of these peoples. Whereas before they had been peaceful and egalitarian, now they became aggressive, hierarchical, and patriarchal. A New Individuality t is significant that the Bible tells us that the Fall occurred as a result of Eve eating from the apple of knowledge and that Adam and Eve then “realized that they were naked so they sewed fig leaves together and covered themselves.” This suggests that the Fall was linked to the development of a new self-awareness, which gave them the ability to observe and judge themselves. In a similar way, the ancient Indian epic the Mahabharata says that the “holy men of old” were “self-subdued and free from envy,” suggesting a lack of self-awareness and selfassertion. According to the Chinese myth of the Age of Perfect Virtue, when human beings fell out of the Tao, they developed a new kind of individuality and self-sufficiency. According to Chuang Tzu, the true man of ancient times, “did not grow proud in plenty, and did not plan his affairs… He could commit an error and not regret it, could meet with success and not make a show.” In other words, these ancient men acted without analyzing their behavior, presumably because they were less self-aware, and so free from feelings of guilt and pride. Chuang Tzu also hints at how this new individuality led to a new kind of intellectual discrimination and an awareness of sepa- I rateness. He states that early humans “were not yet aware that there were things,” but later humans “were aware that there were distinctions.” In other words, this environmental disaster seems to have affected people in such a way that they became more individualistic and selfish, a sudden intensification of the ego. As a result, these peoples experienced a new sense of inner discontent, which created a powerful drive to gain power and wealth. At the same time, they experienced a new sense of separation between themselves and others, the natural world, and even their own bodies. Whereas earlier peoples experienced a shared sense of being and a natural kinship with other beings and nature as a whole, these peoples lost the ability to empathize with others. And these were the roots of social pathologies such as warfare, male domination, and social oppression. Over the following centuries, these groups spread over Europe, the Middle East, and Asia, killing and conquering the peaceful peoples they came across. By 500 BC, these peoples conquered the whole of Eurasia, leaving only a few indigenous peoples such as the Laplanders of Scandinavia, the tribal peoples of Siberia, and the indigenous peoples of the forests and hills of India. In mainland Europe the only surviving nonIndo-European indigenous peoples were the Basque people of northern Spain (who amazingly still survive today) and the Etruscans of Italy, who were soon to be wiped out by the Romans. Most modern European, Middle Eastern, Asian, and American peoples are the descendants of these peoples, and we have inherited their strong sense of ego. This is still the main difference between us and indigenous peoples such as the Native Americans, and Australian Aborigines, and the reason why they have a more respectful attitude towards nature than us and a more spiritual vision of the universe. As the myths of a Golden Age suggest, rather than a progression, the last 6,000 years of war, oppression, and hardship are the result of a painful degeneration from an earlier, healthier state. We may finally be moving forward now, but only in the sense of turning a full circle, and rekindling glimmers of ancient harmony. z 51 THE HIGGS BOSON A N D T H E L A RG E HADRO N COLLIDER e h t g n i T k R e e A S P D O G 52 M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 : E L C I T ucked away in a sleepy Swiss village lies the Center for Nuclear Experimentation and Research (CERN), the site of the recently completed Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the world’s largest particle collider and perhaps the most complex machine ever built. Just put online, the LHC will start out at low energies, and soon will be running at full strength, producing the highest directed energy collision ever produced on Earth, 362 megajoules of work-energy per collision beam (or the equivalent of 100 kilowatt hours). Perhaps for this reason, there has been much apprehension concerning what might happen when the collider is fully powered up. The concern has been expressed like this: what if a high-energy collision is induced between matter and anti-matter particles, causing a local tear in the spacetime fabric and creating a mini black hole that sucks the matter of this world into its escapeless, gravitational void? LHC scientists dismiss this as exaggerated fear-mongering. The collider has numerous safety features (such as a particle beam escape valve that kicks out any aberrant beam from the machine in a few microseconds). Further, the LHC does not have the power to create and sustain a real black hole—one capable of sucking in an entire solar system. Even if a miniblack hole were to be created, it would be within the electromagnetic confines of the machine, and would only last a tiny fraction of a second. The principle goal of the LHC is to reveal the so-called god particle: the Higgs Boson, which is about 120 times more massive than a proton, and gives mass to all other particles as they emerge from the primordial quantum field. T By Michael Ricciardi WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM 53 The LHC is actually two accelerators that curve around a ring-shaped structure, each carrying its stream of protons in the opposing direction. These beams of protons are guided by a series of 20,000 powerful and revolutionary electromagnets. Adjacent to the collider are four different detectors, each designed to detect a distinct type of particle. One of these—the massive ATLAS detector—is eight stories tall, half the size of a soccer field, and can measure the path of a particle called a “muon” to within 40 micrometers. 54 M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 In quantum physics, a particle’s spin determines much of its interaction with other particles. In this regard, there are two main species of particle: fermions, which have half integer spins, and bosons (named after the renowned Bengali physicist Satyendra Nath Bose), which have whole integer spins. Fermions are elementary particles while bosons are composite particles (those having smaller constituent parts), with the exception of four “gauge” bosons, one for each of the four forces. Bosons are deeply mysterious particles; at high energies, they change their behavior and act like a group of fermions. But unlike fermions, multiple bosons can occupy the same space and time. The Higgs Boson—named after quantum physicist Peter Higgs—at the moment, just exists only in mathematical equations, where its presence is required for other particles to derive their mass. But soon enough, scientists hope, the Higgs Boson will be detected by the LHC via the smashing and shattering of two protons at speeds approaching 99.99999% of the speed of light. If and when this happens, its discovery will confirm the Standard Model of Quantum Mechanics which, with the exception of a particle for mediating gravity (the graviton), will then be complete. The problem is that at the high energies achievable by the LHC, the Standard Model breaks down and starts spitting out mathematical gibberish, such as negative probabilities. So physicists are eager to find more particles, otherwise their model will fail to explain extremely high energy conditions. But physicists are confident that the LHC will detect a treasure trove of particles, such as the elusive “graviton,” which mediates the force of gravity across the cosmos. Although Einstein, in his General Theory of Relativity, did not envision a particle that mediates gravity, in Quantum Mechanics, every force has a corresponding particle. If no such particle is revealed, then this may mean that Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity (GR) may be wrong or incomplete. Unifying the Fields… with Strings! here has been a historical problem merging Quantum Theory (QT) and GR into one seamless theory. Quantum Theory is amazingly accurate at predicting the outcomes of subatomic T WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM 55 QUANTUM MECHANICS and the Hadron Q uantum physics is the study of subatomic (smaller than an atom) particles. These particles—protons, electrons, neutrons, photons, and more exotic ones such as mesons, muons, and quarks—combine in different ways to produce the physical matter of the universe. They also carry the four forces, or types of energy, that comprise the cosmos: electromagnetism (sound and light), The Strong Force (which hold atoms together), the Weak Force (governs radioactive decay), and gravity (which keeps the Earth in orbit around the sun). A hadron is a composite particle comprised of three “quarks” stuck together by three “gluons.” One of the configurations of quarks and gluons is a proton, the large particle that sits in the center of, for example, a hydrogen atom, accompanied by a neutron and encircled by an electron (in the case of heavier elements, there are more protons, neutrons, and electrons). So then, a large hadron collider is a proton collider, and smashing two protons together at energies almost equivalent to the energy of the universe moments after the Big Bang should reveal constituent matter more fundamental than even quarks and gluons. —MICHAEL RICCIARDI processes. And GR has been accurate in predicting events on the super-huge scale of solar systems, supernovas, and galaxies. But the two theories use different mathematical mechanics. Thus, physicists have long sought a “grand unified theory” (GUT) that 56 will unite Quantum Theory and GR. The current and most popular contender is what is known as String Theory. The actual strings that lend their name to the theory are infinitesimal, vibrating, onedimensional threads of energy which, depending on their shape and vibration pattern, become normal particles such as photons, quarks, muons, mesons, electrons, and protons. According to String Theory, these high energy, vibrating string-states correspond to different partner particles. But until these super partners are validated in the scatter matrices of particle collisions, strings remains only theoretical (and it may take years to sort through and analyze the mountains of data generated by these collisions). According to Einstein, we inhabit a four dimensional space-time continuum, comprised of three spatial dimensions and one temporal dimension. But unifying QT and GR will depend upon finding telltale traces of higher dimensions of matter. These dimensions exist on an incredibly small scale. In fact, theories such as String Theory and M Theory (the “mother of all theories”), may require proving the existence of as many as 11 dimensions! In String Theory, these extra dimensions are described mathematically as tiny, elaborately twisted shapes (known as Calabi-Yao shapes, after the two mathematicians who discovered them), and possess a peculiar property called symmetry duality. Each Calabi-Yao shape has its mirror version. This is where super-symmetry and super-partner particles come in. Finding these particles means verifying these tiny, twisted, supersymmetric dimensions, and this means that physicists will have found their Grand Unified Theory. But as of 2008, the previous crop of particle accelerators have failed to produced evidence of such particles, or the hidden dimensions in which they are found. But the LHC, with its ability to hurl subatomic particles at each other with unprecedented speeds, may just have enough juice to break on through to a higher dimensional universe. In modern physics, unlike traditional philosophies and religions, there is no god that keeps the universe working. The “god particle” is to Quantum Theory what the “missing link” was to anthropology. Finding it will complete QT by validating what is theoretically believed to give mass to (that is, bring into existence) all other particles. One could equate this to René Descartes’ idea of the “prime mover,” or the abstract power (or force) that first set everything in motion, the first instability that caused creation. On September 10, 2008, the LHC went online, starting off at low energies. However, within a few days, an electrical failure between two of the collider’s gigantic magnets forced a shut-down of the entire machine. At present, LHC scientists do not anticipate restarting the LHC until November or December of 2008, at the earliest. Once more, the world awaits. z M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 e v i t a n r e t l e A h t t s n e i B e e n i z Th a Mag . E S R E V I N U N W O KN Yes, I wish to subscribe! Name Street City/State/Zip Email (REQUIRED FOR ALL PDF ORDERS) I Yes, sign me up for your FREE weekly e-newsletter! Print Subscription I 1-Year Sub. (4 issues): $24 (save $3.80) I 2-Year Sub. (8 issues): $45 (save $10.60) I 3-Year Sub. (12 issues): $61 (save $12.40) ................................... ................................... ................................... Canadian/Overseas Shipping Fee ($11/year): .................................. PDF Subscription (save 50% off the print magazine!) All PDFs will be EMAILED so include your email address above! I 1-Year Sub. (4 PDFs): $12 I 2-Year Sub. (8 PDFs): $22 I 3-Year Sub. (12 PDFs): $30 ................................... ................................... ................................... Total Enclosed: .................................. Payment I Check or money order enclosed Bill my: I Visa I MasterCard I Discover I AmEx Card # Expiration Date Signature I Renew my subscription automatically by charging my credit card. I know I can cancel my subscription at any time. The Parapsychology REVOLUTION 58 M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 An Interview with Dr. Robert Schoch A geologist and paleontologist by profession, Dr. Schoch has studied some of the greatest ancient monuments around the world including the Great Pyramids, the Sphinx, and the underwater structures near Yonaguni Island, Japan. He has also written several bestselling books, including his most recent, The Parapsychology Revolution. by Michael Lohr WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM 59 Tell us about your new book The Parapsychology Revolution. he Parapsychology Revolution is the result of collaboration between my former student Logan Yonavjak and myself. In the book we include selections from 14 seminal papers, dating from 1886 through 2007 (some published for the first time in our book), by major figures in the field, plus a hundred pages of our own commentary. I am excited about the book, as I believe that parapsychology and psychical research are incredibly important while at the same time poorly understood and often ignored, dismissed, or ridiculed by mainstream academics and conventional thinkers. It is my hope that the book will help make the case that studies of paranormal mental phenomena need to be taken seriously and demonstrate that many serious scientists and researchers (include Nobel prize-winning scientists) who have studied parapsychology in-depth agree that there is something there that needs explanation. One of the principle concerns of many religious leaders, ethicists, researchers, and scientists is the fundamental nature of the human personality and what determines our boundaries and our role in the natural world. It is topics such as these that are at the core of psychical studies. In The Parapsychology Revolution, we discuss paranormal and psychical phenomena, including the concepts of ESP (extrasensory perception: telepathy, clairvoyance, and precognition) and psychokinesis (PK, or mind over matter). T How did you become interested in parapsychology? y interest in parapsychology is a logical extension of my work on ancient cultures. I am a traditionally trained scientist whose first inclination was to simply dismiss any reports of mindreading and similar “nonsense.” I was long M 60 of the opinion that people can believe what they want to believe, and if they want to believe in conjurer’s tricks or imagine that they can know the private thoughts of others, well, that just shows the sad lack of scientific literacy in this present age. However, in the back of my mind, I always felt that maybe things are not quite so simple. Could there just possibly be something to this paranormal stuff? Might, every once in a while, a thought or feeling make its way from one person to another without the use of any of the known senses? Could there be an occasional instance when something abnormal occurs, like a falling book, when no one is near it and no known forces act on it, which coincides with a strong emotional discharge from a person on the other side of the room? As a child, I was introduced to what are now referred to as paranormal phenomena by my late grandmother, who just happened to be a Theosophist. My grandmother was one of the most rational people I knew, but she was not one to belittle or ignore possible cases of the genuine paranormal. Maybe this was due to her theosophical background, or perhaps she was attracted to theosophy because of her interest in Eastern philosophies, the occult, and paranormal phenomena. I have never been a theosophist myself. However, reading various theosophical works still made me wonder if perhaps there was a core of something being touched on that transcended the typical materialistic view of the universe. In college I studied anthropology as well as geology, and it seemed that in one primitive society after another, supposed instances of the paranormal kept cropping up. Why are such beliefs so widespread if there is nothing to them? If there is nothing to clairvoyance, why are clairvoyants found among different cultures around the world? Attending graduate school, I focused on traditional science. Then in the 1990s, I found myself applying my geological expertise to the study of ancient cultures, beginning with the Great Sphinx in Egypt and moving on to the study of pyramids and other megalithic structures around the world. Questions I had not given much thought to for years started to haunt me once I became involved in studying not just the stones, but why past civilizations had erected the stones into magnificent edifices. The why behind the monuments, more often than not, included religious beliefs and practices, initiation rites and rituals which, in many cases seemed to have an ostensible paranormal aspect, whether it was clairvoyance, divination, or manifestations of higher levels of consciousness. Were the ancient structures used, at least in part, to alter consciousness and possibly enhance paranormal phenomena? Logan Yonavjak prodded me even further along these lines. He not only served as my field assistant during research trips to Egypt and Peru in 2003 and 2005, but she also challenged me to look at the serious scientific literature addressing the paranormal. It was a result of our collaboration that gave rise to the book. Has your research validated telepathy? ost people who have seriously studied the subject conclude that telepathy (mind-to-mind interactions) is the best-supported class of paranormal phenomena. There is strong laboratory evidence for telepathy, such as classic card-calling experiments, as well as many more sophisticated tests of telepathy, clairvoyance, and remote viewing. There is also a large and compelling body of evidence from spontaneous cases supporting the reality of telepathy. In The Parapsychology Revolution, we include many examples of telepathy, both experimental (laboratory based) and spontaneous (occurring unexpectedly). Because I can testify to it personally, I will give an example of possible telepathy that occurred while I was working on the book. One Saturday a spider bit me. This particular spider had the appearance of a hairy little tarantula with large green eyes that I M M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 “Questions I had not given much thought to for years started to haunt me once I became involved in studying not just the stones, but why past civilizations had erected the stones into magnificent edifices…Were the ancient structures used to alter consciousness and enhance paranormal phenomena?” WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM 61 found very striking and beautiful. I was quite worried about the incident as my thumb hurt where I had been bitten, and I knew stories of people becoming extremely ill or even dying from spider bites. I did not know what kind of spider it was, and thus could not judge whether it was poisonous or not, so before letting it go (I do not believe in killing anything unnecessarily), I took photographs of the spider in order to later identify the species. That night or early the next morning, a friend of mine, thousands of miles away, dreamed or hallucinated (her description) of a tarantula-like spider with “beautiful, large green eyes.” The next day, she sent me an email about her dream (she does not write to me that often, and does not normally relate her dreams to me). Upon receiving her email, I told her about the spider incident and sent her photos of the actual critter. To this day I am convinced that my spider bite and her dream were not just a simple case of chance coincidence. Is there scientific data to support the validity of remote viewing? t is clear that the scientific data supports the reality of remote viewing. In my opinion, however, every case of remote viewing can be interpreted as a form I temporally. That is, telepathic signals can travel from the past or the future to the present. Thus, even if no one is at a particular remote location at present, the remote viewer may pick up information from someone who was at the location in the past or will be at the location in the future. So there is no clear way to distinguish between telepathy and true clairvoyance without a telepathic component; this is a continuing issue in theoretical parapsychology. In Supernatural, Graham Hancock explored the use of psychotropic drugs to induce hallucinogenic visions (see Mysteries issue #17). How does this methodology relate to parapsychology? have interviewed psychotropic drugusers who have strongly asserted that their telepathic and clairvoyant powers were enhanced by the drug use. However, given that they were in a drug-induced state, it is sometimes difficult to evaluate independently the veracity of such claims. My current interest is primarily in determining the capabilities and potentialities of humans and other living organisms, in a normal or baseline state, before adding complicating factors such as powerful psychotropic drugs. I would like to point out that even early in the serious study of men- I “In my opinion, every case of remote viewing can be interpreted as a form of telepathy. In most cases there is someone at the location being remote viewed from whom information could have been picked up telepathically.” of telepathy. In most cases there is someone at the location being remote viewed from whom information could have been picked up telepathically. Also, there is evidence that telepathic signals are not bound 62 tal paranormal phenomena, various forms of hypnosis could affect telepathic performance. Also, some of the earliest systematic laboratory studies of telepathy and clairvoyance at Duke University included administering various drugs to test subjects. For instance, it was found that sodium amytal suppressed mental paranormal abilities in subjects. Do you believe that poltergeists/ ghosts are real? hen it comes to poltergeist activity (unexplained movements of objects, such as items falling off shelves or being thrown through the air without any physical cause that can be observed), I am convinced that such activities can be real. I say “can be,” as there are, unfortunately, occasional cases of fraud and misreporting. I have personally observed a minor, but genuine, poltergeist incident. I also know other people whose credibility is beyond reproach, who have either observed or experienced poltergeist activity. In my opinion, however, poltergeist activity is not due to ghosts. Rather, I subscribe to the theory that poltergeist manifestations actually are unconsciously caused by—or emanate from—the person who superficially appears to be the target of the activity. Poltergeist activity appears to be a method of working out unresolved emotional and psychological tensions and conflicts. As far as genuine activity caused by discarnate spirits or entities, I am yet to be convinced that such actually occur. Most cases that I have analyzed, such as a music box suddenly playing after someone’s mother recently died and the child is grieving, can be explained in terms of classic poltergeist theory rather than as the activity of an independent ghost. Visions or sightings of so-called ghosts also occur, even without any material manifestations (no objects are moved, for instance). An example would be a soldier in the 19th century stationed in India. One night he wakes up to see a ghost that resembles his grandmother standing at the foot of his bed. He tells his friends about the ghost the next morning, and they all have a hearty laugh. Two weeks later, however, the soldier receives a letter with the sad news that his beloved grandmother died the very night and hour that he saw her ghost. Does this mean that the discarnate spirit of the grandmother physically W M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM 63 visited the grandson? Or was the grandmother thinking about her loved ones, including the grandson, as she lay dying, and a telepathic connection manifested on the part of the grandson as a vision of his grandmother standing at the foot of his bed? Is there any evidence to support the existence of past lives? mong the best evidence for reincarnation is the work of the late Dr. Ian Stevenson (University of Virginia) who worked with young children who apparently remembered former lives. Stevenson was able to actually identify (at least to his satisfaction) the former personality. Typically in the cases documented by Stevenson, the previous personality, or former incarnation, died no more than a few years before the child was born and lived not very far away. The young child would recount aspects or memories of the former life typically between the ages of two and five, but these would fade away in the ensuing years. In many cases, the children showed behavioral traits that could be related to the previous personality, and where the former personality died violently, birthmarks were found on the child corresponding to wounds in the former personality. Some claim that this is incontrovertible evidence for reincarnation. But Stevenson’s evidence can also be interpreted simply as the telepathic transmission of limited sets of data from one person to another. When it comes to past-life regressions, I tend to believe that many recovered past lives are fictional, although they may involve bits of information from another time, place, or persons that were acquired paranormally. Another line of compelling evidence for the reality of paranormal phenomena is the study of presentiments or “pre-sponses,” essentially a form of short-term precognition as measured by physiological parameters (heart rate, electrodermal activity, and so forth). Numerous replicated experiments have demonstrated the physiological responses of individuals to, for instance, disturbing photographs a second or two before they are actually viewed by the person. According to conventional science, this should not be possible. A 64 “Numerous experiments have demonstrated the physiological responses towards viewing disturbing photographs a second before they are actually viewed. According to conventional science, this should not be possible.” M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 What paranormal paradigm did you find little evidence for? did not find much incontrovertible evidence for séance-style phenomena, such as the materialization of objects from empty space, the protrusion of material (ectoplasm) from a medium’s body, and the like. Such phenomena were a mainstay of séances in the 19th and early 20th centuries, and even occurred in some cases when a medium held a séance naked and after the room had been thoroughly searched for hidden objects. However, numerous investigators at the time demonstrated how some instances of materializations could be the result of hiding objects in body cavities, and then the objects were regurgitated (or extruded from the vagina in the case of a female medium). Admittedly, there are some cases of materializations that have never been definitively explained by normal means, but at this point, it is difficult to evaluate them critically using only the historical records. I Why do you believe there exists certain cultural stigma on the research of the paranormal in western society? o this day, it is not generally accepted as a legitimate academic endeavor, and those who insist on taking such studies seriously are often marginalized, passed over for promotion or ridiculed. Why this active hostility to paranormal studies? For one, charlatans and fraud plague the field. Fraud is a serious problem, and one reason it is important to undertake large statistical analyses, both of lab results and of field studies of spontaneous cases of possible paranormal phenomena, searching for regularities and patterns, as one would expect among any natural phenomena. Also, one of the strengths of certain nonhuman studies sometimes applied in parapsychology (for instance, studies of pets responding telepathically to their owners) is that it is less likely that animals will cheat and lie. It should also be noted that many powerful mediums who appear to have genuine paranormal abilities also have low moral values and will cheat and commit fraud, perhaps unconsciously, especially when their genuine paranormal powers fail. Even after sorting out fraud so that we are dealing only with genuine instances of the paranormal, there are major issues that re- T WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM main unresolved. For instance, we do not fully understand what conditions are best to elicit paranormal phenomena and thus these phenomena are not easily replicated in a laboratory setting. Why do some people go out of their way to be a skeptic? or some, there seems to be a deepseated fear that there might be some reality to paranormal phenomena. If even the most minor paranormal phenomena might be genuine, for some, this would upset their entire worldview. Indeed, there are such strong feelings against the paranormal that claiming to have had a paranormal experience can actually be used to diagnose that person as having a mental illness. For example, the fourth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders explicitly includes “belief in clairvoyance, telepathy, or ‘six sense’” as one of the diagnostic criteria for Schizotypal Personality Disorder. Perhaps it is no wonder that many people are hesitant to discuss paranormal experiences, or feel compelled to actively deny the paranormal. Simply dismissing all potential paranormal phenomena out of hand is much easier than attempting to study such phenomena carefully. For many people, a phenomenon is not “real” unless it can be duplicated in a laboratory setting under controlled conditions. Being a natural scientist and field geologist, I have never agreed with this contention. After all, can we create a genuine volcanic eruption in the laboratory or even on command in the field? Finally, some people consider it immoral to study, or even show a casual interest in, paranormal phenomena. This appears to be a legacy of the traditional fear of the occult, and witchcraft in particular, that is still persistent in some sectors of modern society. F What is the most fascinating paranormal anomaly that you’ve come across? ascinating, compelling, and important to me is the work of various modern researchers who have demonstrated a weak but persistent correlation between low levels of geomagnetic activity and spontaneous telepathy. This is a strong argument supporting the contention that there is something genuine to the concept of telepa- F thy. It suggests that spontaneous telepathic phenomena are real and natural and influenced by other natural parameters. Alternatively, are we to hypothesize that hundreds of hoaxers over nearly a century and a half have conspired to fake telepathic incidents in identical correlation with geomagnetic activity? This latter hypothesis strikes me as downright ludicrous. It has also been found that incidents of the paranormal correlate with Local Sidereal Time (which relates to the position of the horizon at any particular point on Earth relative to the center of our galaxy). Furthermore, there is evidence that paranormal mental phenomena are more common in certain geomagnetic and geological settings. This ties in with my research on ancient temples, tombs, and sacred sites. In my opinion, many important ancient sites were carefully chosen and aligned to natural environmental factors, such as rock types and geomagnetic anomalies. But a correlation between geomagnetic activity and spontaneous telepathy does not necessarily imply that the telepathic signal is magnetic or electrical in nature. The human brain is influenced by magnetic and electric fields, and whatever may be the carrier of the telepathic signal, the transmission, reception, and manifestation of the message by the brain could be hampered or enhanced by differences in the magnetic and electric fields. What’s next on your agenda? am interested in studying the correlations between certain locations on Earth and heightened paranormal mental abilities. Could they be due to geological anomalies that have a genuine effect on human consciousness? Were ancient temples and ritual sites used to focus energies and enhance anomalous mental capabilities? Likewise, the concepts of precessional ages and a cycle of descent from a Golden Age are found in many cultures. Could there be a genuine basis for such traditions? Might mental capacities and capabilities alter over the course of time based on the external influences on our planet? These are topics that I am currently exploring, and they may find their way into my future books. z To learn more, visit www.robertschoch.com or www.bu.edu/cgs/faculty/inserts/schoch.html. I 65 Book Reviews The Origins of Psychic Phenomena Poltergeists, Incubi, Succubi, and The Unconscious Mind BY STAN GOOCH ISBN: 978-1-59477-164-4 $16.95, INNER TRADITIONS, 2007 N o stranger to the paranormal, researcher Stan Gooch takes on everything from the heightened psychic abilities of lefthanded people to multiple personalities, autism, schizophrenia, and reincarnation in The Origins of Psychic Phenomena. Claiming possession of intuitive abilities himself, the author posits that most ghosts, UFOs, discarnate entities, and demons originate from our own unconscious minds. While his thesis is certainly welcome in an age where the literalization of the anomalous poses a real danger, it takes a bit of effort to acclimate to Gooch’s thinking process. Once this is achieved, however, a refreshing world opens up that keeps in check the profusion of platitudes on psi phenomena that abound in most current books on the topic. In the chapter on “Dynamic Unconscious,” after Sigmund Freud’s peculiar resistance to the occult is described, along with his theories of neurosis, Gooch offers the possibility that not only repressed sexuality causes psychological disturbances but repressed paranormal abilities as well. Such a prospect is astonishing, but unfortunately, the author does little to expand on it. He could have easily devoted an entire chapter to this theme alone; how naturally psychic children are discouraged from developing their 66 abilities and bury their talents only to have them surface as psychological problems later in life. He also dismisses UFOs as being non-existent. After a few more chapters of descriptive cumulus, the author regains his intellectual strength in the conclusion, where he posits that the unconscious mind possibly originates in the cerebellum, an area of the brain that has been neglected by psychotherapists and psychiatrists (he even provides statistical proof of how much page space has been devoted to it in various scientific and medical texts). Dreams and the bizarre phenomena he describes are really attempts, he suggests, of this part of the brain to communicate with the conscious mind. Reading The Origins of Psychic Phenomena will not only make us more receptive to these cerebellar communiqués but also encourage us to derive benefit from them in the form of increased awareness, heightened intuition, and psychological equilibrium. —JAYE BELDO The I-Files ISBN 0-915024-74-8 $14.95, TRAILS BOOKS, 2008 The M-Files ISBN: 0-915024-66-7 $14.95, WISCONSIN TRAILS, DATE The W-Files ISBN: 0-915024-59-4 BY JAY RATH $14.95, TRAILS BOOKS, 2007 J ay Rath is an award-winning journalist and humorist who has contributed to National Public Radio and various national Quest for Middle-Earth BY DIRK VANDER PLOEG ISBN: 9780595440931 $14.95, IUNIVERSE, 2007 A uthor Dirk Vander Ploeg asks in his fascinating book Quest for MiddleEarth whether or not J.R.R. Tolkien’s rich tales of hobbits, elves, dwarves, and men in his Lord of the Rings series were simply products of one man’s vivid imagination or actually based on ancient myths and forgotten legends. Vander Ploeg also sees a type of Da Vinci Code influence upon Tolkien, who wove into his stories a belief that royal blood (San Graal) must be preserved, and that installing the rightful king could only save the land, Middle-Earth. Drawing from centuries-old royal traditions, Tolkien insinuated that the king must marry to continue and renew the royal bloodline. That is the reason Arwen and Aragorn had to marry. She was an elfqueen, born of the royal blood. Despite what science tries to tell us, we have no idea where we actually came from. It is nice to think that there lies within our inner selves a mystic past full of great kings and queens, magical little people, fearsome beasts, and great heroes. Quest for Middle-Earth opens our imaginations so that we all can make our own search for who we are, where we came from, and ultimately where we are going. —TIM SWARTZ magazines. His fascination with outré events and unsolved mysteries has led him to produce three books detailing unexplained phenomena, from Illinois (I-Files), Minnesota (MFiles), and his native Wisconsin (W-Files). In each case, Rath’s primary focus is the UFO phenomena and its related fields of alien abductions, “men in black,” and livestock mutilations. Those topics consume 29 of the 44 collective chapters found in these three volumes, and provide a fairly complete record of UFOlogy from 1897 to 1998. Rath’s presentation of the evidence—as in his coverage of other strange phenomena—is defi- nitely tongue-in-cheek, but careful reading of his text may reinforce the sense that “we are not alone.” Cryptozoology runs second in Rath’s attempt to corral paranormal midwestern events, with eight chapters devoted to unidentified out-of-place (OOP) creatures. Bigfoot gets the most attention here, although Wisconsin’s lake monsters rate a chapter of their own. Other OOPs include phantom kangaroos (Illinois and Wisconsin), giant birds (Illinois), and werewolves (Wisconsin). The goat-sucking Chupacabra also crops up in The WFiles. Lost Atlantis is M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 Book Reviews another subject dear to Rath’s heart, and sure enough, he finds putative evidence of the mythic civilization both in Illinois and Wisconsin. Minnesota, not to be outdone, weighs in with artifacts suggesting that errant Vikings were on the prowl 130 years before Columbus sailed the ocean blue. Rath is a cartoonist as well as an author and his comedic sketches illustrate these three volumes. They are accompanied by several photos, sketches, and engravings. Each book includes a placename index and a short bibliography. Dedicated paranormal researchers may rue the absence of larger subject indexes, but Rath’s books are for enjoyment, not scholarly research. In that pursuit, they are all highly successful. —MICHAEL NEWTON 2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl BY DANIEL PINCHBECK ISBN: 15854248-3-8 $13.45, PENGUIN, 2007 D ecember 21, 2012, according to the Olmec/Maya calendar, is the date which signifies the end of a great cycle and the return of the feathered serpent king Quetzalcoatl. Is there a worldwide paradigm shift of consciousness forthcoming? Is the destructive chaos that has bewitched humanity for so long about to give way to a more serene state of awareness? Pinchbeck seeks to answer these and many other questions through a compelling analysis of mythological studies and scientific research, in- cluding astronomy. In 2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl, Pinchbeck explains that both the completion of this great cycle and the return of Quetzalcoatl represent mythical archetypes, and not necessarily an actual event. The underlying meaning of these archetypes suggests a shift in the very nature of the human psyche. Pinchbeck discusses such global problems as terrorism, mass consumption, the war in Iraq, and climate change, analyzing each topic as symptoms of a suffering society in desperate need of change. Pinchbeck also discusses Frederich Nietzsche’s concepts of “will to ignorance” and “will to superficiality,” two ideas that give cause to the current mood of ambivalence and apathy, and discusses what needs to be accomplished to lift humanity out of this quagmire. He assails the diametrically opposed—but equally destructive— fundamentalist religion and secular humanism for their utter lack of spirituality. He pleads Memoirs of a Monster Hunter A Five-Year Journey in Search of the Unknown BY NICK REDFERN ISBN: 978-1-56414-976-3 $14.99, NEW PAGE BOOKS, 2007 M ost authors wait until their twilight years to pen memoirs, but Nick Redfern’s 43 years have been so jam-packed with mysterious adventures that he has already published two volumes recounting his exploits. Now, after detours to Roswell and other assorted eerie destinations, Redfern has produced a memoir of the years preceding his adventures chronicled in Three Men Seeking Monsters (2004). Here, readers are privileged to eavesdrop on Nick’s courtship of his bride and track his move from Britain to the Lone Star State where, naturally, he discovers no shortage of things that go bump in the night. Redfern’s Memoirs are not confined to Texas, however. His quest for the bizarre is endless, taking him to Canada (in search of Ogopogo), to Wisconsin (tracking werewolves), to the Puerto Rican jungles (seeking Chupacabras), and to Roswell, NM (pursuing alien corpses). Along the way, he investigates vampires, man-eating catfish, spectral pets, and other oddities. Whether or not you buy Redfern’s theories on any particular beast or phenomenon, it is always a treat to watch him in action, racing around the countryside with rowdy friends, hot on the trail of monsters or the next pub down the road. Memoirs gives us a peek inside his hectic life… and what a life it is! —MICHAEL NEWTON WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM with the reader to walk away from the old orders and embrace a new spirituality. Utopian and idealistic, perhaps. Dead-on about the current situation we find ourselves in? You better believe it! If the book has a negative aspect, it is that several subjects deserve further focus. But this is a minor complaint. Like Graham Hancock’s exquisite masterpiece Supernatural, 2012 discusses the shamanic experience and ritual hallucinations from the use of iboga, ayahuasca, and DMT and how these experiences increase the parameters of human consciousness. At the very least, these studies into the origins and inherited psyche of humanity are fascinating. —MICHAEL LOHR Extraordinary Animals Revisited BY DR. KARL P.N. SHUKER ISBN: 978-1-905723-17-1 $28, CFZ PRESS, 2007 D r. Karl Shuker is Great Britain’s premier cryptozoologist, the author of 12 major books, plus several hundred articles on unknown animals and mysteries of nature. Since 1997, he has served as the primary zoological consultant for Guinness World Records, and in 2001, he made headlines by winning £250,000 ($510,000) on the British version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire. Shuker’s latest book is a revision of his Extraordinary Animals Worldwide, published in 1991. Whether focused on a particular class of cryptids or surveying the planet at large, Shuker never disappoints his readers in their search for the peculiar, the outlandish, and the astounding. His new work runs the full gamut from aardvarks to zorillas (an African super-skunk), describing hundreds of unique creatures along the way. Twenty-four chapters 67 Book Reviews offer detailed information on beasts both mythical and mundane. Here, readers will find themselves enthralled by singing mice and crowing snakes; “extinct” beasts that survive, despite death sentences imposed by modern science; sea monsters and hulking “globsters”; giant spiders, flying jackals, and furry woodpeckers. At the same time, skeptics will app r e c i a t e Shuker’s scientific rigor in exp l a i n i n g nature’s mysteries and his facility for baring hoaxes. Extraordinary Animals Revisited is lavishly illustrated with 54 exotic 19th-century engravings, a few modern drawings, and eight photographs. Its exhaustive bibliography includes more than 300 sources, again, fully updated from the original edition, with new books and articles published through 2006. An index of animal names, both popular and Latin, guides readers quickly and conveniently to their curious creatures of choice. This monumental work is highly recommended for all ages. —MICHAEL NEWTON The Kolumbas Affair BY SAMUEL BLANKSON ISBN: 978-1905789993 $19.99, BLANKSON ENT, 2007 R eminiscent of futuristic stories involving good versus evil and the annihilation of the universe, The Kolumbas Affair is a swashbuckling adventure story that takes its inspiration from the Book of Revelations, the final episode of the Bible that de- 68 scribes the end of time, the return of Jesus Christ, and the final battle against the forces of evil. The Kolumbas Affair follows the adventures of Alfias, a miner on an asteroid in the Kolumbas Solar System who, on his 21st birthday, receives a mysterious “call” from an immaterial voice. In the mold of all universal heroes, Alfias embarks upon a quest to uncover the secret of Kolumbas Major, the purple planet controlled by a secret society known as the Elders. Just as in Star Wars, in which Luke Skywalker is pitted against the Empire, so Alfias must outwit the ETCA, the government agency that employs killer telepaths and mercenary black operations teams to silence its enemies. Alfias teams up with Jonathon, the captain of an alien ship called the Triton, and becomes involved in a conspiracy to overthrow the ETCA. As Alfias attempts to open the Abyss on Kolumbas Major and thereby solve the mystery, he is pursued by ETCA agents as well as by the ancient Elders. The Kolumbas Affair includes a wealth of colorful characters who help Alfias on his quest. There is Tirimakashi, the ancient instructor in martial arts; his ass i s t a n t Tubac; and Chi Ling, the demur student who assists Alf i a s . There is also a whole host of The Way of the Explorer BY DR. EDGAR MITCHELL ISBN: 978-1-56414-977-0 $16.99, NEW PAGE BOOKS, 2008 A s a member of the Apollo space program of the 1960s/70s, Mitchell was the sixth man to walk on the lunar surface. Yet on his three-day return flight to Earth, he became convinced of the universal connectedness of all things. Thus, The Way of the Explorer addresses the balance between the physical exploration of the material universe and the almost-spiritual probing of consciousness itself. A year after his lunar flight, Mitchell left NASA to found the Institute of Noetic Sciences, whose mission is to “advance the science of consciousness and human experience to serve individual and collective transformation.” (“Noetic” comes from the Greek word nous, referring to inner “knowing.”) The institute conducts research into the powers of consciousness, including perceptions, beliefs, attention, intention, and intuition. The Way of the Explorer is therefore something of Mitchell’s manifesto. The first part of The Way of the Explorer tells the story of Mitchell’s journey to the moon. In the second part, Newtonian physics, philosophy, mysticism, Tibetan monks, shamans, hallucinogens, Einsteinian dimensions, and out-of-body experiences are all analyzed in Mitchell’s quest to map the interconnectedness of intelligent beings. He examines such phenomena as the role of consciousness in affecting physical reality; the acceleration of the expansion of the universe; matter and anti-matter and the big bang; and why the universe is friendly to carbon-based life. The urgent message Mitchell seeks to convey here is the need to curb our penchant for acquiring material wealth as the means for achieving happiness. A far-ranging meditation on the meaning of life, this book is well worth reading for the authoritative voice Mitchell brings to the discussion. —CHARLES RAMMELKAMP ETCA soldiers who are intent on stopping Alfias and his cohorts. In true suspense fiction fashion, there are cliffhangers; in fact, The Kolumbas Affair ends with Jonathon’s ship slipping to safety out of hyperspace, suggesting that the story will be continued in an upcoming sequel. This book will appeal to anybody with a taste for quick-paced action stories and science-fiction dramas. —CHARLES RAMMELKAMP The Parapsychology Revolution BY DR. ROBERT M. SCHOCH AND LOGAN YONAVJAK $16.95, TARCHER/PENGUIN, 2008 D r. Robert Schoch, whose previous best-selling books Voices of the Rocks, Voyages of the Pyramid Builders and Pyramid Quest: Secrets of the Great Pyramid have focused on the pyramids and the age of the Sphinx, this time delves headlong M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 Book Reviews into the murky world of the paranormal, including clairvoyance, telepathy, distance healing, remote viewing, past-life regression, and the existence of ghosts. Starting with documented cases as early as the 1880s, The Parapsychology Revolution provides a thorough review of the research of such scholars as Ian Stevenson and J.B. Rhine. Among the many additional case files reviewed, Schoch and Yanovjak consider the parapsychological research of Dr. William G. Roll and the electromagnetic field research of Dr. William Jones, the extrasensory perception research conducted at Duke University and the PSI studies by Dr. Stephen Baumann at the University of North Carolina’s Spring Creek Institute. Based upon these and many other scholarly probes into the paranormal, Schoch and Yanovjak make the case that there is something mysterious and unexplained happening, and that parapsychology is a valid area of study that needs to be further pursued. In addition, the concepts of reincarnation and past-life regression are analyzed and applied to quantum mechanics. What results is a rather groundbreaking hypothesis that hints at the possibility that past life memories may actually be a form of quantum telepathy, where the remnant memories of the deceased download into the minds of the living. Those individuals that are sensitive to such experience, especially the young, may have another’s memories placed in their mind at random. This essentially establishes the theory that the human mind can WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM be a conduit for remnant echoes of once-living beings that still exist in the ether of quantum reality. There are extensively documented chapters addressing cases of fraud. But Schoch and Yanovjak build a good case that discredits the skeptics, exposing the close-mindedness that is prevalent in some circles while proving their charge that the paranormal is a legitimate area for scientific research and that the world of the paranormal does indeed exist, but that it may exist in a way not previously considered. —MICHAEL LOHR The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism BY NAOMI KLEIN ISBN: 978-0-312-42799-3 $16, PICADOR, 2008 I n Norman O. Brown’s seminal work Life Against Death, the author suggests that capitalism is the inevitable result of anality, a form of psychosomatic repression in which the excretory functions of the body are considered so repugnant that one’s ego pushes them deep into the unconscious mind where neurosis and anxiety arise. In The Shock Doctrine, author Naomi Klein provides ample evidence that the kind of capitalism levied against vulnerable thirdworld enclaves such as found in South America, Africa, and Indonesia is based on sheer psychopathy, indicated by the willingness to intimidate, torture, and kill people who stand in the way of the corporate bottom line. Mere Freudian analysis fails to address this conscienceless dimension. All the stops in one’s psyche must be pulled out in order to dive into the abyss of the inhuman, where state-sanctioned torture, genocide, and other forms of coercion are employed with routine efficiency. Klein manages to delve fearlessly into this heartless world to produce one of the most stunning indictments of disaster capitalism ever written. Citing countless examples of how independent, thriving countries have been ruined by the cutthroat methods used by thugs such as Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet, Klein then traces the doctrine and suffering back to one Milton Friedman at the University of Chicago and “the Chicago Boys,” who coached politicians and their underlings in various countries to carry out these destabilization methods. What has been carried out globally, Klein suggests, has its origins in a form of mind control first experimented with by the CIA in their MKULTRA program and the infamous Dr. Ewen Cameron, who would reduce his patients to vegetables in an attempt to wipe their brains clean and rebuild their personalities. Klein’s description of these methods is nothing short of harrowing, for they are now implemented on a widespread scale, primarily through electroshock torture, solitary confinement, and Strange Guests BY BRAD STEIGER ISBN: 1-933665-17-3 $12, ANOMALIST BOOKS, 2006 A ny English-speaking fan of paranormal or Fortean literature should recognize the byline of Brad Steiger, an Iowa native with 162 books to his credit. The work in hand, described by Steiger as his first “conventional book,” was originally published in 1966. Strange Guests devotes itself to the poltergeist phenomenon, with 35 short chapters detailing various cases from 1662 to 1964. (A passing reference to hauntings in 335 AD provides no details.) The tales are not collected chronologically, nor are they sorted geographically. Like much of Steiger’s work, the book resembles a collection of short articles or columns. Shortcomings of this work—as with most of Steiger’s paperback originals—include the absence of an index or anything resembling source documentation. Skeptics will predictably dismiss the tales as fantasies or fabrications, but believers and undecided readers will enjoy Steiger’s excursions into the bizarre. —MICHAEL NEWTON 69 Book Reviews water-boarding. Most noteworthy is that Klein maintains her journalistic integrity in the face of the ultimate insanity she so describes. The Shock Doctrine may open the doors for psychoanalysts to push beyond the sexual repression envelope and confront the very evil which fuels disaster capitalism. If only Milton Friedman were alive to read this remarkable, scathing work and witness the devastating consequences of his delusional ideas. —JAYE BELDO Dark Mission: The Secret History of NASA BY RICHARD C. HOAGLAND AND MIKE BARA ISBN: 978-1-932595-26-0 24.95, FERAL HOUSE, 2008 T he space program has long been the target of conspiracy theorists, from unconfirmed UFO cover-ups to the alleged staging of the Apollo lunar landing. Now Richard Hoagland, former NASA consultant and CBS News advisor—and Mike Bara, an engineer who worked for various aeronautics firms—have written the hidden story of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Hoagland and Bara begin their exposition with the Viking mis- sion to Mars in the mid-1970s, in which a human face was discerned among the photographs of the Martian surface, and from which Hoagland other analysts deduced signs of intelligent life. Working backwards, Hoagland and Bara unravel a NASA cover-up of the discovery of civilizations more advanced than that of Earth. Such a revelation would have devastating social consequences, a Brookings Institution study asserted, leading to a complete disintegration of society and a rise Flying Saucers and Science A Scientist Investigates the Mysteries of UFOs BY STANTON T. FRIEDMAN, MSC ISBN: 978-1-60163-011-7 $16.99, NEW PAGE BOOKS, 2008 N uclear physicist Stanton Friedman has been a warhorse UFO researcher since the 1960s. But Friedman is best known for being one of the primary researchers of the Roswell Incident, as well as the controversial MJ-12 papers that serve as proof in some quarters that the government knew about the reality of the UFO phenomenon as early as 1947 and has kept a tight lid on it ever since. More recently, Friedman coauthored a book with Kathleen Marden, the niece of the late Betty Hill, about the groundbreaking Hill abduction experience. So it is with impressive credentials that Friedman offers Flying Saucers and Science, which serves to answer the skeptics. As Friedman so readily acknowledges, he is not an “apologist UFOlogist,” but rather takes on all comers with the gloves off. Everyone from the late Carl Sagan (a classmate of Friedman’s at the University of Chicago) to Seth Shostak, one of the head honchos at SETI (“Silly Effort To Investigate,” Friedman jokes) gets put through the same wringer of logical, point-by-point refutation as Friedman builds a virtually unassailable case for the reality of flying saucers and the alien occupants they carry. Friedman also grapples with how the mainstream media handles the subject of UFOs, raising what he calls the “laughter curtain” of ridicule and disinformation. He uses a series of public opinion polls taken through the years that demonstrate, among other things, that the higher the education level of the respondents, the more likely they are to believe that some UFOs are intelligently controlled by forces not of this Earth. Admittedly, Friedman is part preaching to the choir. Real progress on this battlefront could only come from reaching out to those not already predisposed to believe in UFOs that are flown by alien beings that are not of this earth. If you are not listening to Friedman and his peers by now, one can only wonder if you ever will. —SEAN CASTEEL in religious fundamentalism. Therefore, the conclusion was that such a revelation should be suppressed by the U.S. government. Hoagland traces the secret control of NASA through Egyptian mythology and the gods Isis, Osiris, and Horus to the cult of Freemasonry and the German rocket scientist Werner von Braun. From the Surveyor moon mission of the 1960s to the Mars Pathfinder mission of the 1990s, Hoagland describes what NASA found… and concealed (lunar glass towers, a Martian “Sphinx” complex, like that of Giza) and draws conclusions about the nature of these ancient structures and the motives behind their concealment. The connections are dizzying and the reader can easily lose the thread that links the seemingly benign elements of the conspiracy, but the authors weave their way back to the Face on Mars to reveal a complex conspiracy to hide the astounding evidence of extraterrestrial civilizations. Hoagland asserts that a complex strategy of disinformation was put into place for this very purpose. Indeed, Hoagland contends that the Apollo lunar landing was faked on a sound stage in the Nevada desert by NASA to obscure the real reason NASA sent astronauts to the Moon—to recover the artifacts left there by previous alien visitors. Dark Mission is a compelling, if confusing argument that leaves one wondering about the reasons behind government policies and secrets kept from the public “for its own good.” —CHARLES RAMMELKAMP 70 M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 Music Reviews Arm Me SPECIAL O.P.S. MONKTAIL CREATIVE MUSIC CONCERN funky retro surf-guitar medley (punctuated by the occasional scream) that suitably caps off the CD and erases any doubt as to the group's musical talents. Not many groups can proclaim their uniqueness in the way Special O.P.S. can and still make it tolerable. Leave your expectations at the door and just enjoy. This album is not for everyone, but an open mind will likely find much to enjoy in this chaotic bit of rock/jazz fusion. CD#: 07541 91552 B ells and chimes, drums, rattles, and even a bicycle horn come into play in unprecedented ways throughout Arm Me, as if Special O.P.S. went to the music store, grabbed every instrument they could find, and started testing them out. It squeaks, it whines, it growls and grinds, and in “If Christian Wolff Was a Train Robber,” it gallops,. But somehow it all works, from the barely audible crashes of cymbals and random notes to the grinding guitars and pounding percussion. The fluctuations in sound are always surprising, and if you find a lot of the music out there predictable, this album guaranteed that this won't be. The call-andresponse “refrain” of “The Ceiling Down Here Is The Floor Upstairs,” with guitar and triangle echoing off one another is, along with the guitarbased arabesques of “Demons Dancing Around His Pipe,” one of the few points on the CD that can be identified as musical, albeit stretched and tormented in creative ways. “Eye Meta/Wave Eye” is a WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM Lawrence of Suburbia THE DARBUKI KINGS DARBUKI KINGS RECORDS MARKETED BY MASSIVE MUSIC melody underlaid with subtle drum tempos while laouto, sitar, and woodwinds evoke sultry Arabian Nights-style fantasy. “Blue Eyes” adds a hint of flamenco and strings to the other instruments while a lush bouzouki accompanies the rollicking tune. “Drum Talk” is a percussion fan's dream, especially unusual in its showcase of the adjustable sounds of the “talking drum,” a common instrument in Middle-Eastern and African music that underlies most melodies but rarely gets much love on its own. “The Silk Road” fuses a touch of electronica and heavy drums into the mix. A sonic journey down the fabled Silk Road and beyond, Lawrence of Suburbia winds its way into the listener's soul with its engaging style. throughout and coaxing any facial expression apart from boredom on his face seems to be a herculean task while his habit of throwing rocks, apple cores, and twigs as a shorthand for what his character feels is downright infuriating. When he disappears, however, he leaves behind only a journal and recordings of his songs, which become both a soundtrack to the film and a hint to his disappearance. The music becomes the CD's only saving grace, especially for folk-rock fans. The soulful guitarbased melodies render feelings of love and loss in a way the film could only dream of achieving. CD#: 44185 00017 T he latest effort of the Darbuki Kings maintains their trademark wit and potent musical talent in a worthy followup to Doumtekastan. “Yassir Ubetcha” morphs from a medieval fantasy to guitar-driven funk to an accordion-lover’s dream, all in the space of a few bars; “No Habibi No,” in contrast, is traditional mideastern music at its finest, with all its rich tempos and instrumentation while “Nile Sunset” cruises along on a river of sound. “Khartoum” is a languid, eerie Far From Haggersville Peter Mathews Trinema Media n unusual multimedia experience, Far From Haggersville is supposedly best listened to on a computer, since its more esoteric aspects are unavailable otherwise. Part treasure hunt, part musical exploration, it purports to tell the story of “ADN,” a mysterious young musician whose songs are the key to solving the mystery of his own disappearance as well as in discovering a small fortune in actual gold coins. It is telling, though, that there has to be some potential financial motivation to watch the short film that accompanies the music. for it is hard to be compelled by the drivel that appears on the screen. “ADN” is a young man on a road trip, trying to find his estranged father. Predictably, he encounters unusual people who advise him on his quest. Its corny attempts at profound dialogue fall flat in this trite waste of film. “ADN” (Josh Brail) seems utterly apathetic A Part of the code leading to the treasure promised by producer Peter Mathews is printed directly on the CD itsel, the rest is carved into granite Keystones scattered along the trail followed by “ADN” on his journey across the US. It is a gimmick barely supported by the music on the CD and undermined by the near unwatchability of the short film. Just stick this in the regular CD player and enjoy “ADN”'s music, unless you are passionate about geocaching and have the time and infinite patience required to unearth the mysteries of Far From Haggersville. —RICHARD MACKENZIE 71 In the Theater once hamhanded and offhanded, clumsy attempts to influence the audience that instead make them more wary. While the film occasionally mocks itself as well as the genre it inspired, the sense of fun that shone through in the previous films is largely lacking here, overwhelmed by an overblown sense of its own importance. The hokey New Age mysticism engendered by the titular object clashes oddly with all the mayhem that it takes to discover the fact that alien lifeforms were apparently the first archaeologists. Taken with a full shaker of salt, the film is enjoyable but predictably shallow, and its sheer unbelievability at times stretches that sense of enjoyment nearly to the breaking point. —RICHARD MACKENZIE The Happening (2008) Indiana Jones and The Kingdom of The Crystal Skull (2008) T he long-awaited fourth installment in the adventures of Indiana Jones was almost guaranteed to miss its mark to a certain extent. Raiders of the Lost Ark revitalized the action-adventure genre in a way few films had before or since, and its sequels each added their own components to the winning equation. Neither the worst nor the best of the films, Crystal Skull outdoes all its predecessors in its stunning special effects, but at times falters in its inability to focus. Set in the early 1950s, we find the intrepid Jones (Harrison Ford) dragged from his dusty desk at a university back into the line of duty, trying to keep Soviet agents from locating a mysterious artifact held by the U.S. government. Eventually his search dovetails with the disappearance of an old friend seeking the same item, a crystalline skull that, if returned to 72 its original location in the Mesoamerican jungles, would unleash a source of unbelievable power. Aided by old flame Marion Ravenwood (Karen Allen) and their son Mutt Williams (Shia LeBeouf), a frantic race ensues as both Indy and the Soviets head toward an ancient temple and a history-changing secret that is truly not of this earth Visually, the film is stunning, and the Spielberg/Lucas team pulled out all the stops when it comes to state-of-the-art special effects. For a franchise based on spectacular action, Crystal Skull literally blows away its predecessors with its insane car and motorcycle chases and a nuclear explosion to boot. It is in the details, however, that the film falters. The characters seem constrained, bound by an overdose of political correctness that forces them into ridiculous stereotypes. Unfinished subplots hinting both at McCarthyism and the sense of fear and distrust engendered in the modern war on terror seem at T he latest offering from M. Night Shyamalan is something of a departure from his usual style. The Happening relies on graphic imagery and a sense of mystery to hammer home the terror induced by events beyond our control. Par for the course with the imaginative director/screenwriter, an intriguing plot is weighed down with a mixed bag of ponderous dialogue and lackluster execution that leaves one intellectually fascinated but emotionally numb. A typical day in New York's Central Park is shattered by horrifying self-induced deaths, occurring en masse. As the inexplicable tragedy spreads throughout the northeast, the terrified survivors flee what they initially believe are the results of a chemical agent released by an act of terrorism. When more people are affected, it becomes clear that this airborne catastrophe did not come from the hand of man. Caught in the middle are a couple of teachers (Mark Wahlberg and John Leguizamo) and their families, and it is their odyssey we follow as they make their way through rural Pennsylvania in an effort to escape what seems to be a devastating act of nature. Trying to be portentous and pretentious at the same time, the film is heavy on symbolism and shock. The striking and occasionally gruesome imagery of falling bodies, suicide by hairpin, car, and even by commercial lawnmower becomes one of the film’s stronger points since it has such a visceral impact in light of Shyamalan's prior work, where hints and allusions were his stock-in-trade. The comatose acting typical of his films is eerie and unsettling but wastes the talents of the cast. Here it is more effective than usual, as the sheer scale of the disaster is made clear. But since the people who are affected act just as catatonic as the sur- M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 In the Theater vivors, it is hard to tell who is who except for the fact that the unaffected are still alive. While one could interpret a strong environmental message to the film, the vagaries of the plot leave the true nature of this cataclysm in the air (literally). The characters' various speculations about its cause—from global warming to a biological defense mechanism developed by plants—ultimately become more intellectually stimulating than their plight. Ultimately, our powerlessness in the face of a natural disaster and our vulnerability to the whims of nature is its most profound theme. Despite the prolonged suffering for both characters and audience induced by the torturous dialogue and slow plotting, at its core, The Happening is an unflinching look at human behavior in a crisis. —RICHARD MACKENZIE Death Note (2008) B ased on the wildly popular Japanese manga and anime series, this live-action adaptation of the potent psychological thriller is a tense and haunting glimpse into the nature of morality, justice, and the human mind. Adapting the first three or four volumes of the manga, the film provides enough subtle twists and differences to intrigue one already familiar with the plotline, while those new to the series will not be confounded by its intricacies. Bored and brilliant student Light Yagami (Tatsuya Fujiyama) finds nothing but corruption and frustration in the world around him, sickened by the constraints of the legal WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM system and the injustices that he sees every day. His dream of changing the world is suddenly made possible when he picks up a seemingly unassuming notebook and finds himself face to face with Ryuk, a god of death. The notebook is question is the shinigami's tool for taking lives. Light sees the strange partnership Ryuk offers as an opportunity to cleanse the world of evil and injustice by killing as many criminals as possible, needing only a name and a face written in the Death Note to do so. Naturally, once those who Light perceives as wrongdoers begin dropping like flies, police and governments across the globe see their own efforts to curb crime thwarted and, fearful that their own ineffectiveness might eventually be seen as corruption, they hire the world's greatest detective, a shadowy figure known only as “L” (Ken'ichi Matsuyama), to flush out the perpetrator. Thus begins a lethal cat-and-mouse game where justice, identity, and morality itself are twisted to suit their ends while their conflict could easily end in the deaths of everyone involved. Despite its supernatural underpinnings, Death Note is really a crime thriller that gleefully plays with one’s notions of morality. Wanga creators Tsugumi Ohba and Takeshi Obata clearly state that many of the story's ambiguities are quite deliberate, forcing their audience to draw their own conclusions and notions about the many philosophical questions both text and film present. The acting is first-rate, the fascinating characters portrayed in superb relief, evoking both sharp differences and parallels between the charming yet calculating Light and L's eccentricities. The CG effects that bring Ryuk and the other shinigami to life unobtrusively blend the surreal and monstrous into the human world. A thought-provoking introduction to a powerful series (a sequel to the film has had a limited U.S. release and will likely make its way to video soon), Death Note is an eerie must-see, replete with its compelling plot, moral ambiguities, and unforgettable characters. —RICHARD MACKENZIE The Killing of John Lennon (2006) A ndrew Piddington’s film The Killing of John Lennon tells the story of Lennon’s killer, Mark David Chapman, during the last months of his life, when he flew to New York to murder the pop star (See Mysteries issue #18). Starring Jonas Ball as Chapman, the film does not portray him as a tool of larger political forces, much less a “Manchurian Candidate,” but as a confused young man. His dialogue is taken from Chapman’s writings, interrogation, and interviews. Yet despite blurry shots, stuttering quick-action sequences, and sound effects suggesting vertigo and hallucinatory states (meant to suggest somebody descending into madness), Chapman’s motive for killing Lennon never is convincingly fleshed out. A great deal of emphasis is placed on The Catcher in the Rye angle. Chapman was obsessed with the J.D. Salinger novel in which the protagonist, young Holden Caulfield, rails against “phoneys.” One senses he felt betrayed by Lennon who sang, “Imagine no possessions” but owned yachts, farms, and several residences. But is this really a reason to kill him? The more fascinating sequences come after Lennon’s death, when Chapman is protected from lynching by the New York police department and later, when he is taken to the correctional facility in upstate New York. One gets a sense of the emotional frenzy that Lennon's death unleashed; if craziness was at the root of his killing, it was certainly in evidence afterward. Ball does a fine job portraying a confused and unhappy young man, but the movie does not provide insight into Chapman’s motives, only rehashes the circumstances of which the moviegoer was already aware. —CHARLES RAMMELKAMP 73 The ClassiFiles BOOKS/MAGAZINES Discount New Age Books WWW.DISCOUNTNEWAGEBOOKS.COM 50% off Tarot decks, as well as New Age, metaphysical, integrative health, and spirituality books! Mention this ad for a FREE gift!C Books and Esoteria WWW.GLORIAREISER.COM If we don’t have it, we’ll find it for you. New, used, rare, metaphysical, occult, Tarot, and even general titles and sidelines. (We also carry ritual purpose candles and oils). 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Order from Dianne Robbins, PO Box 825, Weed, CA 96094, call (585) 802-4530, or email [email protected]. 74 Wild Flower Press WWW.5THWORLD.COM Wild Flower Press publishes books exploring the reality of extraterrestrials on Earth. Discover the spiritual aspects and implications of these visitors in order to realize humanity’s destiny as cosmic citizens. To place a classified listing, just email your text to [email protected]. $20 minimum, no maximum, $.50/word. True Tall Tales “Celebrating 150 years of Minnesota history.” Monsters, giants, caves, pirates, Indians, plagues, gold rush fever, and more! True Tall Tales from the land of Sky Blue Waters. 220 pgs, 21 b/w pics. To order, send $20 cash/check to Matt Maida, 30286 E. River Way, Pine City, MN 55063. NOSTRADAMUS by Wence Horak The seer encrypted his metaphysical prophecies in the symbology of ancient myths that speak of the return of the Golden Age, when people will be like gods again. Yet this coming age, to be led by a new North American civilization, is to be preceded by climatic upheavals and dreadful wars of extermination in Europe. To order, send $13.75 to Earth Way Society, P.O.Box 20135, Kelowna, B.C. V1Y 9H2, Canada. Timecraft WWW.AUTHORHOUSE.COM/ BOOKSTORE/ITEMDETAIL~BOOKID~ 21588.ASPX Recent, fact-based novel reveals untold connections between the Illuminati, Satan/Lucifer, ETs, as well as good and evil angels. As a youth, the author found a working relic on which the Holoscape is based, at his grandmother’s farm in May, TX, along 183, between Cisco and Brownwood; the wellhouse is still standing today. See a FREE preview on our web site. All URL listings will also be posted in the links section www.MysteriesMagazine.com. CA 95468, call (888) 724-3966, or subscribe on our web site. PanGaia Journal WWW.PANGAIA.COM Bursting with thoughtful analysis of the pagan world, PanGaia is not dry or stuffy. Look to this journal when you want to sink your teeth into a magazine that isn’t afraid to ask its readers to think about their spirituality. Send $5 for a sample issue to: BBI Media, PO Box 641, Point Arena, CA 95468, call (888) 724-3966, or subscribe on our web site. Feng Shui Now Easier than Ever Before! WWW.FENGSHUI-PLUS.COM Amazing new technology makes costly consultations, rearranging, and expensive rebuilding a thing of the past and totally obsolete! Get your FREE 24-hour test now! Radionics Equipment Conspiracy Journal WWW.RADIONICSBOX.COM WWW.CONSPIRACYJOURNAL.COM UFOs, conspiracies, the paranormal. All the weird news that THEY don’t want you to know! SageWoman Magazine WWW.SAGEWOMAN.COM Heartfelt, compassionate, and uplifting, SageWoman brings a nurturing presence to 20,000 readers. Send $5 for a sample issue to: BBI Media, PO Box 641, Point Arena, CA 95468, call (888) 724-3966, or subscribe on our web site. MISCELLANEOUS WWW.NEWWITCH.COM Develop Real Psychic and Magical Abilities Looking for something wilder than the average pagan magazine? NewWitch fits the bill with its coverage of paganism, solitary magic, and even dueling advice columns. Send $5 for a sample issue to: BBI Media, PO Box 641, Point Arena, Well-established 5,000-year-old order now teaching by correspondence. Earn a Religious Metaphysical Ph.D. degree, no previous education requirements, very reasonable admission fee. For a FREE brochure, write to: University of NewWitch Magazine Metaphysical Arts and Sciences, 2110 Artesia Blvd., Admissions B264MM, Redondo Beach, CA 90278-3014, call (310) 398-1638, or email mysticadamad@ usinter.net The ultimate in power radionics is genuine Karl Welz equipment! Chi generators, radionics equipment, manifestation software, and more. Now you can use powerful magick scientifically without ritual by altering reality with thought-forms powered by the life force. We are #1 in customer service and have the best prices. New Gadget! WWW.LONGEVITYDEVICE.NET This new gadget allows you to stay physically young forever! Sounds too good to be true? The famous immortality rings were highly recommended on pg. 166 in the #1 New York Times bestseller Natural Cures They Don’t Want to You to Know About. One of the most popular devices on the web! See our testimonials at our web site as well as our new inventions. For phone orders or more info, call (650) 2192508. M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 The ClassiFiles Meteorite or Ancient Artifact? A 7-lb. meteorite for sale or best offer. Fell in the year 2000. What origins, purpose, or destiny does this meteorite have, an ancient artifact that escaped the outer worlds, journeying through space to earth? Share in the mysteries that surround the 182 images and never before seen artwork and ancient hieroglyphic writing on the artifact’s four sides and bottom. What is it trying to tell us? The linguistics suggest that it was written by intelligent beings with an astonishingly advanced technology. Send: $25 for five color photos, $15 for 182 images, or $5 for one b/w photo to: Allen Nelson, PO Box 418, N. Chelmsford, MA 01863. ORGANIZATIONS The Order of the Temple WWW.INVISIBLESOCIETY.WS PERSONALS Attention Single Earthmen! WWW.PACISL.COM BEAUTIFUL EXOTIC ASIAN WOMEN desire contact, encounters, romance, and marriage! Experience the “other-worldly” love and devotion of these educated, sincere, and loyal women! You too may spend a lifetime with an Asian woman who is as breathtakingly beautiful as a Martian sunset! FREE details and color photo brochure avail; contact Pacific Island Connection, PO Box 4601MYS, Thousand Oaks, CA 91362, call (805) 492-8040, or visit our web site. PSYCHIC READINGS Tarot Readings by Sandy Corcoran WWW.STARWALKERVISIONS.COM Over 20 years assisting business execs, entertainers, and curious individuals. Readings offered na- WWW.M YSTERIES M AGAZINE . COM tionally and internationally. Appointments for 1/2 hour or onehour sessions. Please call (281) 361-4464 or visit our web site for other workshops and journeys. Psychic Readings In-depth clairvoyant readings for $35 available by email to [email protected] or phone (304-768-0623). By mail, five questions: $20; ten questions: $45 (SASE, photo, and birth date requested). Mail to Betty Shamblin, 307 Westmoreland Dr., Dunbar, WV 25064. Spells cast—prompt service! Cold Case Psychic WWW.COLDCASEPSYCHIC.COM International psychic medium Ericka Boussarhane is a highly respected psychic known for her amazing abilities to communicate with loved ones from the other side. She has helped countless people with issues in relationships, career, family, health, finance, and more. She uses her mediumship, psychometry, clairaudience, clairvoyance, and clairsentience to help find closure and insight. For more info, call (850) 941-4321, visit her web site, or call toll free (866) 9944733. Solace Medium Services HOWSPIRITWORKS.COM The personal psychic for Mysteries magazine publisher Kim Guarnaccia, for over two decades, psychic medium Gretchen Vogel has communicated with the deceased. She sits in prayerful meditation and describes what she sees and hears into a tape recorder, which she then mails to the client, anywhere in the US or Canada. One session is $75 ($80 with credit card), which includes a follow-up email to review the tape. Checks, money orders, and credit cards accepted. For an application or further info, visit our web site or email [email protected]. Free! 1 Black or White Magic Spell WWW.EKSES.COM Tell us what you need! (909) 4737470, or write to Ekses, Box 9315R, San Bernardino, CA 92427-9315.T Got Problems? Need Answers? WWW.PSYCHICNANCY.NET Sessions reveal how you can easily improve your life and raise your consciousness… NOW! Guaranteed. Solutions to life’s problems are available, once clearly seen. Email nancy@ psychicnancy.net or call (904) 737-9758 or (904) 4519877. Psychic/ Intuitive Reader WWW.GLORIAREISER.COM 25 years’ experience as a psychic, life coach, and consultant, providing insight into ANY situation, including relationships, $$$$$, goals, dreams, love, and anomalous experiences. Also by request: Tarot, astrology, and numerology. Accurate and confidential. $1/minute by phone: (217) 222-9082. $5/question via email: [email protected] or mail: Gloria Reiser, 2301 Maine, Quincy, IL 62301-4350. All work is confidential and privacy is respected. References upon request. For more info, write to Todd at PO Box 382, Becket, MA 01223, call (413) 281-9876, or email [email protected]. Tomorrow’s Answers for Today’s Questions Let a psychic guide you in love, career, and relationships. Many people’s lives have become richer with my help and guidance. For free information, write to: Alto, 2225 Parkway #207, Pigeon Forge, TN 37863-2997. Visionary Psychic Clarisse Conner WWW.PSYCHICCLARISSECONNER.COM Need answers? Naturally gifted psychic can help you navigate through difficult times and offer spiritual solutions for your life’s journey… and encouragement along the way! Personal and business readings via phone: (530) 877-3446. “Mystic Monday” special: 10-minute reading only $20! Voodoo Rituals Voodoo’s oldest organization; ritual work by request. Largest occult catalog: $35. Mail to: T.O.T.S., 1317 N. San Fernando Blvd., Ste 310, Burbank, CA 91504, or email [email protected]. Psychic Visions Looking into your past, present, and future, our gifted psychics will guide you on all matters of life: love, marriage, relationships, career, money, and health. Call for phone readings 24/7. Crystal: (866) 571-1111. Isadora: (877) 852-8255. Fay: (888) 237-2263. Irene: (800) 966-6806. Psychic Readings by Todd Psychic/intuitive and medium readings by phone, email, or in person. I am very straightforward and will help guide and evaluate you in regards to money, relationships, and personal issues. I also work full-time with animals, dealing with health and personal training, both large and small animals. UFOS/ALIENS UFO Detector WWW.ABATEELECTRONICS.COM $45, including battery. Abate Electronics, designer of the original Electronic UFO Detector. Visit our web site for more info, and to view other models, including a paranormal ghost detector. NOTE: Mysteries is not responsible for any of the information presented here. Complaints about services or products found listed within these pages should be directed to the company placing the classified ad. 75 A Glimpse into the Unknown W hile visiting family for a holiday in August of 2008, Sharon Green and her family had planned to attend a ghost tour of Edinburgh, Scotland. The last night of their stay they attended the terror tour, which started in the street of old Edinburgh. After a while they entered the Niddry street vaults, which were like tunnels with rooms coming off them. While they all stood outside one vault, Sharon lifted the camera above the person in front of her and snapped this photo. In this vault, according to the tour guide, people have said to have felt sick, passed out, and two people have even levitated. In this photo Sharon believes she captured a full manifestation of a ghost in skeletal form. What do you think—is it a ghost or a trick of the light? —SHARON GREEN SOMERSET, ENGLAND [email protected] 76 M YSTERIES M AGAZINE , ISSUE #22 FOR A FREE CATALOG, CALL (870) 269-4177 Published By: eBook Publishing UFOTV 2321 Abbot Kinney Blvd. Venice, CA. 90291 Visit us online: www.UFOTV.com For technical assistance with this or any UFO TV product, visit us at www.ufotv.com or call: 1-800-350-4639 WORLD: 310-578-5300 FX: 310-578-5308 All rights reserved under the Pan-American and International Copyright Conventions. This book may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, in any form or by any means electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system now known or hereafter invented, including “not for profit,” without written permission from the publisher, UFOTV e-Book Publishing.