Unexplained Band of Holes near Pisco Valley in Peru
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Pisco Band of Holes
Length: approximately 1,450m
Width: approximately 20m
Number of holes estimate: 6,900
View it on Google Earth:
Lattitude: 13°42’55.37″S
Longitude: 75°52’28.46″W
Eye alt: 3,100 ft
Width: approximately 20m
Number of holes estimate: 6,900
View it on Google Earth:
Lattitude: 13°42’55.37″S
Longitude: 75°52’28.46″W
Eye alt: 3,100 ft
Even von Daniken’s work begins to take on a realness when one finds an old National Geographic from 1933 corroborating the “Band of Holes,” that he personally inspected a few years ago. Each hole is a meter wide and just as deep. There are eight holes spanning 24 meters in width, marching in repetitive uniform fashion, from the Pisco Valley rolling over a mile through mountain terrain — finally disappearing in the misty mass of Peru. These holes remind this old West Texas boy of the traces left by a massive drilling rig moving along methodically, testing the geology of the Andes for precious metals. Lasers have also left such tracings in the ground. Archaeologists say they represented defensive positions or graves for the ancient ones, except why would you bury anyone on a slope in rocky soil at more than a 45-degree angle?
Photo source: http://www.nazcamystery.com/pisco_valley.htm
If you look at the most northern part of the band, you will notice that it ends within unnaturally darkened area (it almost looks like a remnants of an explosion)…
Few miles east from the band of holes, satellite photo shows structures that look like a remnants of an ancient settlement (these formations do not look natural and there is nothing similar in the entire area):
Remnants of an ancient city?
13 42’36.80″ S, 75 51’4.07″ W
Click on the image to enlarge
13 42’36.80″ S, 75 51’4.07″ W
Click on the image to enlarge
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