Is there an underground world?

by Sarah k grundy

A series of underground entrances were found in Cusco, Peru. The discussion around cities and tunnels below the surface of the earth or inside the earth's core is well known throughout the world—In ascended circles and among those in touch with esoterica as well as in secret among those who have built or are currently building underground civilizations.

Subterranean civilizations are said to spread through a vast network of interconnected tunnels across the planet. The portals to access are remembered through the stories that revolve around galleries of the Cueva de Los Tayos in Ecuador or entrances to underground worlds located in the Andes, Himalayas, Gobi Desert, Turkey, and below the Sphinx of Giza to name some.

There are many who believe in a science remiss of quantum physics and therefore our greatest fairy tale. Others believe in what the stories and stones reveal. There’s much that has been carved and written in stone revealing truths they have yet to destroy. Thus, Jules Verne, H.P. Lovecraft, and Edgar Allan Poe, among many others loved writing about all of this often paying homage to the Hollow Earth concept, or a world within a world. Their works were primarily seen as fiction, however, throughout the ages, history has become legend and legend has become myth. (Tolkein)

In one of Goddess Ixchel’s ancient Mayan cities, Teotihuacán, archaeologists recently discovered a new secret tunnel beneath one of the most famous pyramids, The Pyramid of the Moon. For nearly 2,000 years the tunnel remained hidden beneath it. The tunnel is said to represent the underworld of the belief system of the Teotihuacán people. This 2,000-year-old group was around before the Aztec people, who later lived in this area of Mexico.
A secret passageway extends from the plaza to The Pyramid of the Moon buried 33-feet-deep.

Archaeologists recently found a tunnel under the Temple of The Plumed Serpent also. The more we look the more we find. Yet, there’s so much left to be discovered.

Sources: Fast Company, Andean Peru Treks, Atlas Obscura, University of Alaska Geophysical Institute, Jörgen Hartogs, Edmond Halley English astronomer, geophysicist, mathematician, meteorologist, and physicist, J.R.R. Tolkein, Sir John Leslie proposed a hollow Earth in his 1829 Elements of Natural Philosophy (pp. 449–53). In 1864, in Journey to the Center of the Earth [28] Jules Verne describes a hollow Earth containing two rotating binary stars, named Pluto and Proserpine.

Previous
Previous

Naked on Cashmere

Next
Next

Why are Abandoned Castles so fascinating?