Mystery of the Paqaria Tampu de Viracocha Basin The Exploitation of a Legend.

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Mystery of the Paqaria Tampu de Viracocha Basin The Exploitation of a Legend

Transcript of Mystery of the Paqaria Tampu de Viracocha Basin The Exploitation of a Legend.

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  • Mystery of the Paqaria Tampu de Viracocha Basin The Exploitation of a Legend
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  • Viracocha According to myth, the god Viracocha rose from the waters of the Paqaria Tampu high in the Andes during the time of darkness to bring forth light. He made the sun, moon, and the stars. He made mankind by breathing into stones. After having destroyed his first creation he made a new, better one from smaller stones. noted that Viracocha was described as "a aunt man with gray features, solitary and morose. Viracocha eventually disappeared across the Pacific Ocean and never returned. He wandered the earth teaching his new creations the basics of civilization, as well as working numerous miracles. He wept when he saw the plight of the creatures he had created for as they grew in strength so did they grow in their destructiveness. It was thought that Viracocha would re-appear in times of trouble. Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa, a celebrated Incan scholar, noted that Viracocha was described as "a gaunt man with gray features, solitary and morose. He was sometimes seen with an alb secured round his waist, a staff in one hand and a book in other. On occasion he has appeared like a specter barely visible through the forests mist. Viracocha petroglyph near Paqaria Tampu Carbon dated 597 BC Viracocha sighting near Volgrazya, Bulgaria, 1973
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  • Paqaria Tampu de Viracocha Basin Located high in the Andes near the confluence of the Cauca and Magdelena rivers, the Paqaria Tampu de Viracocha basin and ruins were discovered in 1937. Subsequent to the expedition, the site was secured by the Columbian Federal Government. Air routes over the region were permanently diverted in 1954. Access has only recently been restored to a select group of researchers and corporate entities.
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  • Paqaria Tampu de Viracocha Basin An anomalous geological reservoir with no known inlets or outflows containing water infused with dissolved Gold with unusual properties and possessing an almost perfect cylindrical geometry with a diameter of.328 km with a depth of 1.52 x 10 3 dm, the Paqaria Tampu de Viracocha Basin is formed from fused obsidian lining and is located near the base of Apu Qun Tiqsi Wiraqutra ruins. These unusually sophisticated structures were thought to have been occupied by the early Inca prior to 600 BC.
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  • Located at an elevation of 2314 meters immediately below and to the west of the Apu Qun Tiqsi Wiraqutra ruins, the P aqaria Tampu de Viracocha has been visited only once 1937 by Prof. Marco Hovanes from the University of Cartagena. A single sample of the gold infiltrated water was recovered and secured by the Columbian Geological Survey for extended Study. Dr. Hovanes was killed in an automobile accident in 1939. A published report in the Journal of Geology (pp.125-137, no 24, 1987) reported low levels of Sr-90 isotope both in the water and along the circumference of the basin. Satellite telemetry from geosynchronous orbit suggests that isotopic levels rapidly decline to negligible values at a uniform distance of 3 meters around the edge of the basin. Half-life analysis also indicates that the highest concentrations of Sr-90 roughly coincide with the abandonment of Apu Qun Tiqsi Wiraqutra over 2600 years ago. Apu Qun Tiqsi Wiraqutra Proximity of the Paqaria Tampu de Viracocha Basin to the Nazca Lines located in the Las Palmas Depression has fueled local speculation that the two features are connected to possible extraterrestrial visitations. [ed: note the similarity between the Nascan relief glyphs and the layout of a modern airport]
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  • In 2010, the Haliburton Corporation contracted with Escobar and Fuentes Industries under the auspices of the Columbian government to airlift extraction and purification equipment designed to remove the dissolved gold from the Paqaria Tampu de Viracocha Basin. There are three Class Action law suits currently under review by the Bogot Superior Court which in response to a previous ruling by one of the lower courts filed an injunction against both Haliburton and Escobar and Fuentes to cease the Viracocha operations. However, on July 15, 2014 under Article 65. 27867 of the Law of Regional Governments enacted by the Congress of the Republic of Columbia, the injunction will be lifted on August 27 th. The airlifts of equipment and personal are expected to be completed by the end of the year. Plaintiffs continue to argue that the expected corporate investment of $125 billion dollars far exceeds any profit that might be accrued from the on-site extraction and purification of the gold. The Columbian Ministry of Finance and Economics has requested that the MVHS Financial Group determine the legitimacy of the claim. Due to the limited amount of the original 1937 dissolved gold sample, the MVHS Group has been granted permission by the Columbian government to mount an expedition to the Paqaria Tampu de Viracocha Basin in order to collect fresh samples from the Gold reservoir. The results of their analysis will be released to the Ministry of Finance and Economics in September, 2014. Any future Court Action is pending.