Mohenjo-Daro is an ancient city located in the Indus Valley of what today is Sindh Province Pakistan. The city once was a thriving hub around 2500BC. It was one of the earliest known major cities, on par with ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia and Minoan Crete. By 1700BCE the city was abandoned, and no one really knows why or knows what happened to its inhabitants. Speculation abounds, but the best theory is one that will blow you away.
Mohenjo-Daro, which means, Mound of the Dead, once had a population around 40,000 and the signs of it being an advanced civilization are obvious. It had well defined streets laid out in a grid pattern, which shows advanced civil engineering. Cock-fighting may have been a religious ceremony here and some advanced tools have been found there. The real name of Mohenjo-Dara is not known, but this may come to light later in this story. After its rapid end, the city was lost for 3,700 years until it was rediscovered by the Archeological Survey of India in 1919. This led to a survey and dig, by John Marshall in 1925 and a major excavation in 1930. Marshall found some amazing discoveries which led to a theory we have today. 44 skeletons were found that had signs of a quick rapid death. No injuries were found on the remains, but women holding children and groups dying together in scattered patterns was just the beginning. It wasn't until 1977, when British researcher David Davenport found evidence that part of the city had been destroyed in a massive blast. The bodies had signs of dying instantly from extreme temperatures. Vitrified bricks and pottery are found around the site. Vitrification only happens by very high temperatures. Some of the pottery, bones and building were fused together and have been turned into glass. The most damning discovery was a layer of highly radioactive ash covered part of the city and the bodies tested had had radioactivity 50% higher than natural radioactivity would produce. A 2014 study of the pottery done by mineralogist Sampath Iyengar found that the clay brick and pottery showed amazing results. Mineral analysis showed that the sample had aluminum, silicon and potassium in it. Using x-ray diffraction, which is used to determine how the sample was formed showed that it had similarities of volcanic rock and it was determined that it would've taken temps of 4,000 to 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit to do this. The radiation and vitrification could've only been done by a nuclear explosion. A nuclear weapon in 1700BCE? Not possible, you say.
Ancient Indian texts say otherwise. The Indian epic of Ramayana details the destruction of the lost Kingdom of Lanka. The Hindu god, Vishnu, became enraged at the mortal king of Lanka, Ravana, who has become too powerful. Vishnu comes down from the sky to destroy his enemy with what has been called a blast equal to 100 suns. A white hot smoke reduced the city to ash. Thousands of horses and humans were vaporized. In the aftermath, the survivors suffered boils, hair loss and sickness, which many died from. Sounds like radiation poisoning. All of this can be found in the ancient Indian texts of the Mahabharata. I've always been one to believe the ancient texts were a historical record of what happened and not fantastical stories. Just because they described amazing and seemingly impossible things to researchers does not mean they are made up. The Mahabharata describes a war fought in the skies between gods, going from earth to the moon and Mars. One of the little known discoveries on Mars has been the atmosphere and samples of rocks and crust have shown Xenon (Xe) in them. Xenon, as far as we know, is an element that can only be made by nuclear weapons. The Curiosity rover discovered this, look it up. The amount found on Mars was enough to theorize that massive nuclear explosions utterly wiped out the Martian atmosphere, causing the planet to lose its water and all life that was possibly there. Why is this not taught? Why are we kept in the dark? Here is a quote from Morning Star Applied Physics, LLC in an abstract they presented upon the findings on Mars.
Evidence for two massive, air-burst, thermonuclear explosions on Mars in the past is presented, as well as the apparent correlation of the explosion locations with sites of apparent archeology. The explosions were apparently large enough to permanently change Mars climate from being Earth-like in the past, to its present barren state. This suggests that the Fermi Paradox, the apparent silence and uninhabited character of the Cosmos despite the abundance of extra-solar planets and life-precursor chemicals in the universe, may be due to agencies hostile to less developed civilizations. An immediate human expedition to Mars to investigate this matter is therefore urged.
So, none of this will change the mind of skeptics and the usual debunkers have tried to come up with alternate theories, but there is enough strong evidence to prove something extraordinary happened in the ancient past that defies our level of understanding. My mind goes to extraterrestrials, since there is no evidence ancient civilizations had this kind of technology, but who knows? Some may already know, but won't say. Natural radiation does not occur at these levels, especially after 3,700 years. Ancient cultures could not produce heat at 5,000 degrees. For an entire city to disappear and no one knows what happened to them is intriguing, especially when we have ancient texts that have an explanation. For me, the best explanation is a nuclear blast and you always know you're on to something when the pushback from the usual sources gets louder. The scientists and researchers in the 70's were convinced and data found since then confirms a lot of what they thought. Other examples exist, but have been repressed, like thousands of glass balls found in the sand on the Giza Plateau. Could they have been formed by lasers missing their targets? No other explanations have much validity, considering their extraterrestrial composition and the heat required to form them, but it will remain a mystery, just like what happened in Mohenjo-Daro.
Add comment
Comments