Peru & North America - A Comparison of Ancient Sites

in #consciousness6 years ago

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On a recent trip to Peru, I took the photo above of the beautiful painting of the Ceque System that hanging in the Coricancha in Cusco, Peru. Cusco is called the Navel of the World, and the Coricancha, a breathtakingly beautiful megalithic masterpiece, is the navel of the Navel.

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Coricancha is said to mean in English something like "Golden Enclosure." Indeed, it was at one time covered in gold, and reputed to be the home of the one of the Golden Sun Disks of Mu (which was said to be hidden at the time of the Spanish Conquest). The fabulous gold of the Coricancha is long gone, stolen along with so, so much else by the Conquistadors and Catholic Missionaries.

The Seqe, or Ceque, system, of which the Coricancha was the center, was a huge scheme of sacred geometry, and involved at least 42 ley-lines radiating out from this center.

Literature available on this topic suggests that it referred to the Inca empire, which was partitioned into four divisions, and the empire called itself Tahuantinsuyu (“four parts”), and the boundary lines separating the four also radiated out from the Coricancha itself.

A chronicler of the time, Bernabe Cobe, wrote that the ceques were conceived as straight lines diverging radially from the Coricancha, the symbolic center of the world, and extending out into the cosmos.

Sounds like more than the Inca Empire to me....

Then there is the issue of the original Jerusalem being in Peru. It was called Heru-salem, or Hierosolym, and is said to be built by the Egyptians as their capital, and is where they "laid the cord" (the Ceque System?). The Temple of Heru in Egyptian (the language is Medu Neter) was Pr-Heru. Peru.

Waitress: How do you like your history?

Me: I'll take my history scrambled, ma'am!

I believe that the advanced Ancient Civilization was the Muur AKA Moor Empire, the ancient Imperial Seat of which is now Monroe, Louisiana (for more on this, see "The Moors were in Unity Consciousness - The Positive Timeline of Humanity was Scrubbed" post on this blog), all of this was connected to one and the same civilization, and not separate civilizations as we have been taught.

Given that I am all about using this blog to provide compelling evidence for what I am saying, I am going to do just that.

The first thing that struck me as I was travelling in Cusco and the surrounding areas was the incredible similarities between Peru and where I live in Arizona. So I started taking pictures with an eye to capture these similarities.

When I arrived home, just a little over a month ago, I immediately put together a powerpoint showing not only the comparisons between Peru and Arizona, but also of other ancient sites that I have visited in Oklahoma and Arkansas. I was astonished to find undeniable similarities in those places as well, similarities that I was not aware of when I took the pictures. I will say that when I took the photos of the places in Oklahoma and Arkansas, I was taking them with an eye to capture them as ancient sites. So there was an intention set that came back as significant information when they were compared with photos of places in Peru.

What follows are groupings of all these photos into categories to highlight similar characteristics and features that occur in different places over long distances.

Red Rocks:

This particular type of red sandstone masonry is found everywhere in these places - in Peru at Amaru Muru, near Lake Titicaca; in Arizona in the Red Rock country of Sedona and the Verde Valley, of which Cornville is a part; and at many different locations in Oklahoma - I have photos of locations in Bethel, OK; Woodward, OK; and Edmond, OK.

Amaru Muru, near Lake Titicaca in Peru:

Amaru Muru, near Lake Titicaca, Peru.jpg

Just off Cornville Road, Cornville, Arizona:

Cornville Road, Cornville, AZ.jpg

Near Twin Lakes Reservoir, Bethel, Oklahoma:

Twin Lakes Reservoir, Bethel, OK.jpg

Boiling Springs State Park, near Woodward, Oklahoma:

Boiling Springs, Woodward, OK.jpg

Lake Arcadia, Edmond, Oklahoma:

Lake Arcadia, Edmond, OK.jpg

Springs:

The first photo is the view from the top of Montezuma's Well in Rimrock, AZ. It is a very sacred, ancient, and special place. It is an artesian well, from 1,500,000 gallons of water emerge from an underground spring, of which the source is unknown. The whole Verde Valley sits on top of an artesian aquifer, so the name given to what is called the pre-Colombian culture - the Sinagua, or Without Water - in this part of Arizona is a huge misnomer. There is plenty of water underground, and there is a sophisticated hydrological system in place to convey it, and I will be getting to that shortly.

The story-tellers want to show you the stone structure seen inside the well, and say that it was built by cliff-dwellers; and they don't want you to realize that the whole structure is intentional ancient masonry, and that the stone structure was built as a shelter by later occupiers .

Montezuma's Well, Rimrock, AZ.jpg

Montezuma's Well.jpg

The next photo is of the beautiful, peaceful spring at Roman Nose State Park in Watonga, Oklahoma (see the "Connecting the Dots, Cracking the Code, and What this Reveals" post in this blog to learn more about Roman Nose). You can see ancient masonry around the edges of the spring, and I was told by a friend that it is an interdimensional portal. So are the Antelope and Buffalo Springs in Sulphur, OK, which are reputedly interdimensional portals to the Pyramids of Giza. Knowing what I know now, that doesn't surprise me. At the time, I knew it was meaningful, but I didn't have the whole picture.

Roman Nose State Park, Watonga, OK.jpg

The next photo was taken at Boiling Springs State Park near Woodward, Oklahoma. This is just one section of a fairly large area containing masonry like this. Note the similarity to the masonry at the Roman Nose Spring. These locations are roughly 70 miles apart, and are geometrically aligned on the diagonal of the North American Star Tetrahedron as it goes through Oklahoma. The Ancients were all about Sacred Geometry, peace, beauty, balance, and harmony. These are healing places with very good energy.

Boiling Springs State Park near Woodward, OK.jpg

Next is a photo of Magnetic Springs, Arkansas. This location is very close to the location of the famous Passion Play of Eureka Springs. I made a trip there because, according to James Tyberron of earth-keeper.com, Magnetic Mountain, of which this spring is a part, is where the Atlantean Platinum Master Crystal of Communication is said to be located. And in addition to what you see here, there is ancient masonry all through this area. More on that later in this post.

Magnetic Springs at Eureka Springs, AR.jpg

Canal & Hydrological Systems:

The Ancient Ones of the Advanced Civilization were Master Hydrologists. In the next photos, I have provided you with evidence of this in Peru, Arizona, Oklahoma, and Arkansas.

The first three photos are in Peru - at Quillarumiyoc (Temple of the Moon); Macchu Picchu; and Tambo Machay. At all three locations, there were canals like those pictured and other styles, throughout the sites. Also, I noticed canals with water on either side of the highways on which we travelled outside of Cusco. I tried to take photos as the bus was travelling, but I didn't get a good picture depicting this.

Quillarumiyoc, Pero.jpg

Macchu Picchu, Peru.jpg

Tambay Machay, Peru.jpg

In Arizona, you find operating canals, such as the one you see here at the bottom of the outside of Montezuma's Well. This is a beautiful location, with many clues of the skill of the stonemasons and hydrologists that built it, and in different styles. It is like a microcosm of styles that I saw in other places as you will see throughout this post.

Montezuma's Well, Rimrock, AZ.jpg

The picture on the top is part of a sophisticated hydrology system in Page Springs, Arizona, in the Verde Valley, and just up the road from Montezuma's Well. It is at a B & B, and I saw it this spring visiting people staying there. It is private, so this was the best photo I could get to show you at least a part of what I saw that day because I didn't take a photo at the time (was not in that mode).

I took the photo on the bottom at an archeological site called Racqui on the Peruvian Altiplano.

When I returned from Peru, I took all of the Arizona photos that you see in this post because Peru reminded me so much of Arizona. So in the process of putting together a powerpoint, I found similarities like this, and others, as you will see.

Off Page Springs Road, Cornville, AZ.jpg

Racqui, Altiplano, Peru.jpg

Here is another part of the hydrological system in Page Springs, at one of the many wineries there:

Page Springs Winery, Cornville, AZ.jpg

Lastly, I wanted to leave you with some images of dry systems, which turn into rivers when it rains hard. The one of the top is outside my front door; the one in the middle is at the beginning of the Cathedral Rock trailhead; and the bottom photo is beside a Sedona, Arizona, neighborhood's street. We call them culverts, or something along those lines, and just assume they were built by nature or the road construction crew. I beg to differ, as there is an explanation we are simply not told about.

Outside my front door, Sedona, AZ.jpg

At Cathedral Rock Trailhood, Sedona, AZ.jpg

Sedona, AZ Neighborhood Street.jpg

Like this clear canal bed running alongside the road in downtown Eureka Springs, Arkansas. One of the many examples which I saw there.

Eureka Springs, AR.jpg

I have two examples from Oklahoma. The top photo, again from Boiling Springs State Park, of a waterway there. The bottom photo was taken at Twin Lakes Reservoir in Bethel, Oklahoma. With its straight lines, and the appearance of the stone, I see a canal built by the Ancients.

Boiling Springs State Park near Woodward, OK.jpg

Twin Lakes, Bethel, OK.jpg

Similar Features in Different Places:

When I was in the process of comparing photos from different places, I noticed all of these previously unrealized similarities.

The photo on top was taken at Roman Nose State Park in Oklahoma, and the one on the bottom was taken at Montezuma's Well in Arizona:

Roman Nose State Park, Watonga, OK.jpg

Montezuma's Well, Rimrock, AZ.jpg

The picture on top was taken at Lake Thunderbird in Norman, OK, and on the bottom, at Turkey Mountain Urban Wilderness Area in Tulsa, OK.

Lake Thunderbird, Norman, OK.jpg

Turkey Mountain, Tulsa, OK.jpg

The next three photos are a grouping of similar design shapes and angles. The top photo was taken at Heavener Runestone State Park, inside the area where the Runestone (which is now in a building) is located.

The middle photo is a feature of the so-called Cameron's Bluff on Mt. Magazine in Arkansas.

The bottom photo is what you can see of what looks like masonry, angled in much the same way as the other two photos, just above the waters of Lake Thunderbird in Oklahoma.Heavener Runestone State Park, Heavener, OK.jpg

Mt. Magazine, AR.jpg

Lake Thunderbird 2, Norman, OK.jpg

The next two sets of photographs show a comparison of Amaru Muru in Peru, the top two photos; and Sedona, Arizona, the bottom two.

Amaru Muru:

Amaru Muru 1.jpg

Amaru Muru 2.jpg

Sedona, Arizona:

Sedona 1.jpg

Sedona 2.jpg

The next sets of photographs show you the beautiful shaped and fitted Ancient masonry, made from what appears to be white, pink, and gray granite.

The two top photos depict stonework from Quillarumiyoc in Peru. We had some individual meditation time at this location in our tour. I sat for quite some time in one of the stone wall's alcoves. When I got up, I examined the stone work closely. As you can clearly see, the stones are beautifully textured, fitted, and no two stones are the same. Each stands alone as an individual, but is perfectly connected with the other stones.

Quillirumiyoc, Peru.jpg

Temple of the Moon 1.jpg

I saw the same thing at Qenko, just outside of Cusco;

Qenko, Peru.jpg

And at the Coricancha in Cusco. Albeit a different style of masonry, the stone material is the same.

Coricancha, Cusco, Peru.jpg

Then when I trotted out the photos of other places I had visited several years ago, I found these that I took at Boiling Springs State Park, near Woodward, OK. I was surprised to see the same white, pink, and gray granite stone material, and masonry similar to what I saw in Peru.

Boiling Springs, OK.jpg

Boiling Springs 2, OK.jpg

The next photos are of evidence of lost ancient high technology in the form of energy waves and drill holes in stone at the Coricancha in Peru;

Coricancha 2.jpg

Coricancha 1.jpg

Drills holes in stone at the very ancient site of Qenko outside of Cusco;

Qenko, Peru 2.jpg

and what appears to be drill holes and evidence of masonry at Cameron's Bluff on Mt. Magazine in Arkansas:

Mt. Magazine 1.jpg

Mt. Magazine 2.jpg

Next is a photo of a similar looking material and structure at: Eureka Springs, Arkansas on the top; and Montezuma's Well in Arizona on the bottom:

Eureka Springs, AR.jpg

Montezuma's Well 2.jpg

Next are comparison photos of an interesting and massive stand-alone stone at Macchu Picchu;

Macchu Picchu, Peru.jpg

and something that looks actually quite similar in size and shape in the water, very close to the lower part of Montezuma's Well where the sophisticated hydrological system I showed you earlier runs through.

Montezuma's Well 3,  Rimrock, AZ.jpg

Next are photos of similarly shaped large masonry blocks in Oklahoma and Peru.

Boiling Springs State Park, near Woodward, OK:

Boiling springs, 3.jpg

Martin Nature Park is just north of Lake Hefner off of Memorial Drive in Oklahoma City. Lake Hefner is a man-made lake and one of the reservoirs for OKC. Please see the "On Chimney Rocks and Man-Made Lakes" post on this blog for more information on this subject.

Martin Nature Park.jpg

It is important to note that the Turkey Mountain Urban Wilderness Area in Tulsa is really hard to find if you are not from there. It is marked on a map, but there is no signage anywhere telling you how to get there. Once you find it, and there is barely signage there, you can find it by the presence of the huge masonry blocks the size of a VW that surround the parking area.

Turkey Mountain.jpg

Tambo Machay, Peru:

Tambo Machay.jpg

Quillarumiyoc, Peru:

Quillarumiyoc.jpg

Next is what appears to be ancient concrete or cement at Turkey Mountain in Tulsa, and Tambo Machay in Peru:

Turkey Mountain 2.jpg

Tambo Machay 2.jpg

at Macchu Picchu in Peru, and the Heavener Runestone State Park in Oklahoma:

Macchu Picchu 2.jpg

Heavener 2.jpg

and at Lake Thunderbird in Norman, Oklahoma.

Lake Thunderbird 3.jpg

The next is a series of pictures depicting several similarities. at the top is Cathedral Rock in Sedona, Arizona; in the middle, Red Rock Canyon in Hinton, Oklahoma; and the bottom is Macchu Picchu in Peru. In addition to the similar coloration of the stonework that you see in all three photos, there is an additional phallic symbolism in the first two photos, and what looks like the form of a uterus at the Temple of the Condor in Macchu Picchu.

Cathedral Rock 1.jpg

Red rock canyon.jpg

Temple of the Condor.jpg

In this next series, you see from left to right - Quillarumiyoc in Peru; a formation near the trailhead parking lot for Cathedral Rock; and a stone wall beside the road going through Eureka Springs, Arkansas. The similarities here are, first, the coloration of the stone work.

Then in the first two photos, there is a distinct similarity in shape and style between what you see in Peru, and what you see in Arizona, with of course the difference being that in Arizona, it is called natural - its megalithic origin unacknowledged. However, you can see masonry cuts in the red rock in the foreground.

Quillarumiyoc.jpg

Cathedral rock 2.jpg

Eureka Springs.jpg

Next, the photo on the top was taken at Heavener Runestone State Park in Oklahoma, and on the bottom at Amaru Muru in Peru. Amaru Muru is famous as an interdimensional doorway.

The Heavener feature, which looks very similar to Amaru Muru, is completely unacknowledged. As a matter of fact, it is located on the outskirts of the state park, which has no attention drawn to it whatsoever as it is not part of the main site. In order to take this picture, I had to go to the edge of what I was seeing as an ancient wall, and lean over a bit when I saw what looked like a window or door carved into the side.

Heavener Runestone State Park.jpg

Amaru Muru.jpg

These noteworthy similarities came out in the process of comparing photographs. The next series of top & bottom photos were taken at Eureka Springs in Arkansas, and at Macchu Picchu.

Eureka Springs in Arkansas:

Eureka Springs 3.jpg

Macchu Picchu, Peru:

Macchu Picchu 2.jpg

Eureka Springs in Arkansas:

Eureka Springs 2.jpg

Macchu Picchu, Peru:

Macchu Picchu 1.jpg

The next series of four photos are to show similarities in the landscapes that include pyramidal shapes. The top photo was taken just outside of the Village of Oak Creek, part of Sedona, Arizona. The second photo near Quillarumiyoc in Peru. The third was taken near Amaru Muru, and the fourth was a view taken from a water taxi on Lake Titicaca.

179 & Beaverhead Flats Rd..jpg

Temple of the Moon.jpg

Near Amaru Muru.jpg

Lake Titicaca.jpg

Here, in the top photo, is a picture of the rock formations that you see on the way to Cutimbo in Peru. I took the bottom photo of a similar-looking rock formation from the shuttle on my way home from the Phoenix Airport.

Cutimbo:

Cutimbo 1.jpg

Just north of Phoenix:

North of Phoenix I-17.jpg

In the next series of photos, on top of the first set there is a photo of Cutimbo in Peru - which is famous for its stone towers called Chullpas; and on the bottom, a photo I took on Beaverhead Flats Road outside of the Village of Oak Creek in Arizona.

Cutimbo 2.jpg

VOC 1.jpg

In this second set, the top photo was taken from the bus on the Peruvian Altiplano, and the bottom was taken on State Road 179, right before you enter the Village of Oak Creek.

Altiplano 1.jpg

VOC 2.jpg

And finally the last sets of pictures. When I travelled on the Peruvian Altiplano, I really felt like I was in Arizona. The top two photos were taken on the Peruvian Altiplano, and the bottom two of the Sonoran Desert outside of Phoenix, Arizona, on my way home from the airport.

Andean Altiplano 1.jpg

Andean Altiplano 2.jpg

Sonoran Desert, Phoenix 1.jpg

Sonoran desert phoenix 2.jpg

Evidence like this, and I have much more than this, is why I believe there was an advanced Ancient Civilization that was global and unified.

What we have been taught about history does not explain in any way the consistencies and similarities of form and structure that I am seeing in what I have shared in this post, and worldwide.

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