WHAT LIES BEHIND THE TUNGUSKA EXPLOSION
Four years from now, 30 June 2008, will be the 100th anniversary of one of the most mysterious
catastrophes: the explosion of a body from space near the Podkamennaya (or Stony) Tunguska River in
Siberia. There can scarcely have been another event in the past century to compare with it. The total
power of the explosion exceeded the combined power of the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and
Nagasaki more than 2,000 times over! Apart from that, the Tunguska explosion caused:
• an anomalous glow in the sky that was observed as late as 10 days afterwards, and the intense
appearance of silvery clouds;
• massive radiation of light and heat;
• disruption of the normal functioning of meteorological instruments and the appearance of surface earth
tremors;
• a tremendous sound wave that travelled twice around the globe;
• the felling of trees over an enormous area of over 2,000 square kilometres;
• weak traces of radioactivity, detected in tree samples and the polar ice layers dating from 1908;
• anomalous properties of the soil and minerals in the area of the Tunguska explosion;
• the unusually rapid growth of vegetation at the epicentre of the Tunguska explosion;
• cooling of the Earth's climate in the following few years.
Despite the fact that such a tremendous event did not go unnoticed, the first attempts to discover what had
actually occurred in the remote Siberian taiga were only made many years later, in 1927. Since then,
dozens of research expeditions have visited the area, hundreds of scientific papers have been written and
several hundred hypotheses put forward about the causes of the event. Not one of them, however, has
been able to explain fully the complex phenomena that preceded and accompanied the Tunguska
explosion. Some of the phenomena observed by eyewitnesses simply do not fit within the framework of
existing theories. Much of what happened then cannot be interpreted at all from the standpoint of present-
day scientific thinking.
More than that, one gets the persistent impression that we have come up against something completely
outside the bounds of our customary understanding of the world about us. Perhaps today we are closer
than ever before to a solution to the mystery that will become a turning point in the development of
human consciousness. But it will require a certain boldness, the ability to look with an open mind
untrammelled by the dogmas current in science in order to properly assess the most inexplicable episodes
of the event.
The work carried out by generations of scientists and researchers provided us with a very rich stock of
facts and scientific material, making it possible to shed light on the true causes and nature of the
phenomena that took place almost 100 years ago in the area of the Podkamennaya Tunguska.
We shall not go over the key elements of each of the main known hypotheses here, but instead concentrate
on those facts that have always remained in the shadows and for some strange reason have never been
given the attention they deserve. Amazingly, taken together with an ancient epic poem, these facts present
a completely different picture of the event that took place early in the last century.
At the very beginning of this study, we should stress that both before and after the Tunguska explosion
there were several other events connected with it in a certain way, being links in a single chain. Therefore,
using the methods employed in criminal investigations, we shall combine them in a single "case". In order
to see the reality that has for so long escaped the eyes of researchers, we shall have to shift our gaze
backwards and forwards in space and time to look at events separated by tens, even hundreds of years.
To this end, we shall turn to the accounts of eyewitnesses, of which even in such a sparsely populated part
of Siberia there were thousands. Even in the late 1960s it was possible to find some 3,000 people who
remembered that extraordinary event!
Before we turn to the facts, we ought to share what we surmised in the course of our investigation: an
hypothesis about the Tunguska explosion that will be unexpected for many, but which was formed during
the analysis of a large amount of data. Drawing on the testimony of thousands of witnesses to the
Tunguska explosion, the findings of researchers, the text of the Yakut epic Olonkho, the reconstructed
chronology of events and an analysis of the consequences of the explosions described not only in the epic
but also through the efforts of scientific researchers, it is possible to put forward the reasoned suggestion
that in the immense, uninhabited territory of northwestern Yakutia there is an ancient underground
technical installation.
A very, very long time ago, someone constructed, in what is known as "the Valley of Death", a complex
that still today is protecting the Earth from meteorites and asteroids. Of course, such a suggestion is
staggering. It is hard even to contemplate such a possibility. It follows that for thousands of years,
something existed alongside us that exceeds not only our current achievements but even our boldest
fantasies about what might be achieved—and we failed to notice! Naturally, none of those who researched
the various scientifically inexplicable consequences of the Tunguska catastrophe could have imagined that
all the traces left by the explosions were the result of the activities of some ancient cosmic defence complex
left by unknown builders!

Local Legends and the Shamans' Warnings
Here is one detail preserved in the ancestral memory of the local population, passed down through the
millennia in an ancient epic poem. The legends passed on by word of mouth tell how this land was once
suddenly wrapped in impenetrable darkness and the surroundings were shaken by a deafening roar. A
hurricane of unseen force arose and the land was shaken by mighty blows.
When everything had calmed down and the darkness had dispersed, an unprecedented sight met their
eyes. In the midst of the scorched land, glowing in the sun stood a tall vertical structure that was visible at
a distance of many days' journey. For a long period of time, the structure gave out unpleasant, ear-
splitting noises and gradually diminished in height until it had disappeared under the ground altogether.
In place of the tall structure there was an immense, yawning, vertical "orifice".
In the course of our exposition of the facts, we shall present several texts from the Olonkho which testify
strongly in favour of the stated hypothesis because of the obvious technological nature of the events
described in the ancient tales. It is surprising that the people who translated and analysed these texts did
not notice or even suspect this.
Let us begin with a detailed reconstruction of events, trying to form an integral picture of what preceded
and accompanied the 1908 catastrophe.
The first to learn of the coming calamity were the shamans of the native tribes. Two months before the
explosion, rumours of the approaching "end of the world" began to spread across the taiga. Going from
one settlement to another, the shamans warned the people of an imminent cataclysm. The people began to
move their herds from the upper reaches of the Podkamennaya Tunguska to the Nizhniaya Tunguska
and further, towards the River Lena.
The exodus of the Evenk began immediately after a suglan (gathering) of all the nomadic clans who
moved around in close proximity, which took place in the month of Teliat (May). A secret conference of
the elders had resolved that the cyclical course of their wanderings should be changed and that the clans
should move close together along the new course.
Then there was a big ritual occasion at which the "Great Shaman" announced the "End of the World":
The ancestors said that they had to move from their traditional places. No one should be there after the
month of Teliat in the month of Muchun [June], thus said the ancestors... The upper people want to visit
Dulia... No one should see that.

And so the nomads began to move across the taiga...
Obeying some inner sense and supporting, as it were, the pronouncements of the shamans, the wild
animals began to leave. The birds flew from their nesting grounds, the swans left the lakes and the fish
disappeared from the rivers. An immense expanse of taiga, measuring several tens of thousands of square
kilometres, lost its fauna. Only those who did not believe the shamans' words remained in the danger zone.
All this speaks for itself. Obviously some early warning of the approaching event was given through the
shamans who "spoke with the spirits of the ancestors". The animals, birds and fish reacted instinctively to
the approaching danger, reacting to the negative influence of the Earth's increasing electromagnetic field
in that part of the taiga.
After studying the texts of the Olonkho, talking with local hunters and those still alive who remember the
distant events, we formed the impression that the complex in question is scattered across different parts of
the taiga and located mainly underground.

The Installation's Power Plant
Destruction or deflection of meteorites and asteroids is achieved using a force field which is conveyed in
concentrated form by some kind of electromagnetic formations that resemble glowing, fiery spheres. In
essence, these are something like ball lightning, with the difference being that the largest ball lightning
known to science is about two metres in diameter, whereas the spheres used to deflect or destroy
meteorites are of gigantic dimensions—some 60 metres in diameter!
It was their flight that was seen in 1908 by thousands of people across much of Siberia, with the result that
the witnesses of the Tunguska event attributed the whole thing to the appearance of a series of huge ball
lightning!
The "plasma spheres" are apparently generated by a power plant located deep inside the Earth at a site
that was quite deliberately chosen by someone. It is associated with a geophysically distinctive area of the
planet: the East Siberian magnetic anomaly. The periodical Tekhnika Molodiozhi (issue 1, 1984) called it
"a magnetic super-anomaly, the source of which lies at a depth of half the Earth's radius". In other words,
the power plant of the complex draws on the energy of the planet and is itself to some degree, it would
seem, one of the causes of this super-anomaly.
Preparation for countering the approaching Tunguska meteorite (it was indeed a meteorite; Kulik was in a
certain sense correct) began two months before the explosion, as is confirmed by the behaviour of the
shamans and the fauna of the taiga. Roughly 10 days before the explosion, the "Installation" located in the
Valley of Death shifted into an active phase. It was the activation of the power plant, and the increase in its
energy level occasioned by the complex beginning its preparations for the generation of energy
(electromagnetic spheres) acting upon the environment, that became the cause for the appearance of
major atmospheric anomalies associated with increased tension in the Earth's electromagnetic field.
The effect of the Installation was so powerful that in the 10 days before the explosion, in many countries of
Europe as well as western Siberia, the darkness of night was replaced by an unusual illumination as if
those areas were experiencing the "white nights" phenomenon of high-latitude summers. Everywhere
there appeared, shining brightly in the twilight of dawn and dusk, silvery clouds stretching east to west
that formed along the lines of force, like those that occur between the poles of a magnet. There was a
sense, as noted by E. Krinov, one of the researchers into the Tunguska explosion, of the approach of some
unusual natural phenomenon.
Many years later, researchers from Tomsk came across a forgotten publication by a Professor Weber
about a powerful geo-magnetic disturbance observed in a laboratory at Kiel University in Germany for
three days before the intrusion of the Tunguska object, and which ended at the very hour when the
gigantic bolide exploded above the Central Siberian Plateau.

The Tunguska Meteorite and the "Terminator" Spheres
Ten days passed and then, on the morning of 30 June 1908, a body from outer space entered the Earth's
atmosphere at immense speed. It followed a trajectory from southeast to northwest. The determination of
the exact trajectory of the meteorite plays an important role in the investigation of the event, primarily
because—as we shall see—there were several objects moving in the sky above the Siberian taiga,
approaching the explosion site from different sides. It was the discrepancies in the accounts of
eyewitnesses—who at one and the same time observed objects above areas of Siberia far remote from one
another, moving on different courses but towards a single point—that confused researchers, prompting
the hypothesis that it was probably a spaceship that had been manoeuvring above the Siberian taiga.
Thirty-eight minutes before the destruction of the Tunguska meteorite, the Valley of Death complex
moved into its culminating phase. The generation of the spheres—which, for the sake of convenience, we
shall call "terminators"—began.
At the Stepanovsky mine (close to the town of Yuzhno-Eniseisk) an earthquake began 30 minutes before
the fall of the meteorite.
One witness to these events was next to a small lake when the ground started to shake beneath his feet.
Something like an earthquake began. Suddenly, down inside him, an inexplicable, inhuman sense of fear
arose. It was as if some force was driving him away from the lake. At that moment, the water in the lake
began to drop down, and as it flowed away, as if into a crack, the bottom appeared which was shifting
apart like two leaves. Indentations could be seen on the edges of the two gigantic leaves. The witness was
seized by an impulsive animal terror and fled as fast as his legs could carry him.
After running a considerable distance, he tripped on a bush and fell; and when he got to his feet and
looked back, he saw rising from what had been the lake a column of bright light, at the top of which
appeared a ball. All this was accompanied by a terrible roaring and humming. His clothing began to
smoulder, the radiation burnt his face and ears…

This episode concurs astonishingly well with the texts of the Olonkho epic and the tales old men tell of the
place called Tong Duurai, across which the Ottoamokh ("holes in the ground") stream flows, where there
are shafts of incredible depth known as "the laughing chasms". From these, the legends say, fiery
whirlwinds fly. After a long period of silence, roughly a century before each major explosion or series of
explosions there would be a smaller-scale event. The legends say that a thin column of fire emerged from
the "iron orifice". At the top of this, a very large fireball appeared. It was escorted in flight by its retinue, "a
swarm of fatally bloody whirlwinds" that wrought havoc in the vicinity. Accompanied by four claps of
thunder in succession, it soared to an even greater height and flew off, leaving behind a long "trail of
smoke and fire". Then a cannonade of its explosions sounded in the distance...

It is remarkable that Yakut legends contain so many references to explosions, fiery whirlwinds and the
launch of flaming spheres disgorged by "an orifice belching smoke and fire" with a "banging steel lid", in
the depths of which lies a whole subterranean country. It is inhabited by a fiery villain "who sows
contagion and hurls a fiery ball"—the giant Uot Usumu Tong Duurai (which can be translated as "the
criminal stranger who pierced the earth and hid in the depths, destroying all around with a fiery
whirlwind").

Eyewitness Testimony
That is what the legends say, and this is the account of G. K. Kulesh, who was an observer at a weather
station in Kirensk, about 460 kilometres from the site of the Tunguska explosion:
On 30 June an unusual phenomenon was observed to the northwest of Kirensk that lasted roughly from
7.15 to 8 am. I did not see it myself, as I sat down to work after recording the reading of the meteorological
instruments. This is what occurred (I give the gist of what those who witnessed it said).
At 7.15 am, a fiery pillar appeared to the northwest, about four sagens [over 8 metres] in diameter in the
shape of a spear. When the pillar disappeared, five strong brief bangs were heard, like cannon shots
following quickly and distinctly one after another. Then a dense cloud appeared at that place. About 15
minutes later, the same sort of bangs were heard again; another 15 minutes later they were repeated. The
ferryman, a former soldier and generally an intelligent, worldly-wise man, counted 14 bangs in three
groups. His duties meant he was on the riverbank and saw and heard the whole phenomenon from start
to finish. [author's emphasis in bold italics]
Many people saw the pillar of fire, but the bangs were heard by an even greater number. There were
peasants in town from the village of Korelinaya that lies 20 versts [21 km] from Kirensk on the nearest
Tunguska. They reported that they had had a powerful earth tremor such that window panes were broken
in the houses…the mark on the barograph roll bears this out.
In the archives of the former Irkutsk Magnetic and Meteorological Observatory, investigators managed to
find notes written by A. K. Kokorin, who was an observer at a weather station on the River Kezhma, about
600 km from the Tunguska explosion site. In his observation journal for June 1908, the section headed
"Notes" contains an exceptionally important entry. It shows that there was certainly more than one body
in the air at that time.
At 7 am, two fiery circles [spheres] of gigantic size appeared to the north; 4 minutes after appearing, the
circles disappeared; soon after the disappearance of the fiery circles a loud noise was heard, similar to the
sound of the wind, that went from north to south; the noise lasted about 5 minutes; then followed sounds
and thundering, like shots from enormous guns, that made the windows rattle. Those shots continued for
2 minutes, and after them came a crack like a rifle-shot. These last sounds lasted 2 minutes. Everything
took place in broad daylight.

At that time, T. Naumenko was observing the flight of a sphere from the village of Kezhma which stands
on the River Angara. He asserted that the body was larger than the Moon and crossed in front of the Sun,
which at that time was at a height of 27º above the horizon. At that same moment, the Tunguska
meteorite flew over the village of Mironovo (58º 14' N, 109º 29' E).
The first to see the flight of one of the "terminators" carrying a powerful electromagnetic charge were the
inhabitants of the village of Alexandrovka (southern Altai territory), which is almost 1,500 kilometres
away from the site of the explosion.
The account left by Ivan Nikanorovich Kudriavtsev, who witnessed the flight of the fiery sphere, contains
details pointing to the electromagnetic nature of the "terminator":
...30 June 1908 was a clear day… I was sitting opposite a window looking NW. Our village, Alexandrovka,
extended along a gorge… Across from the village on the Semi ridge rose the peak of Mount Gliaden. At 7
in the morning, the Sun had already risen but not yet appeared from behind Gliaden. And then suddenly
a bright sphere appeared in the sky; it rapidly grew in size and brightness. It was flying towards the NW.
The flying sphere was the size of the Moon, only brighter; not dazzlingly bright, though: you could watch
its flight without looking away. It flew very quickly. The sphere left behind it on its course a white smoky
trail wider than the sphere itself. As soon as this sphere appeared, the whole locality was lit up by some
unnatural light and that light did not increase evenly, but with some sort of fluctuations, wave-like flashes.
There was no noise, no roar accompanying the sphere's flight, but the unnatural fluctuating light inspired
some sort of fear, anxiety... [author's emphasis]
Ye. Sarychev, questioned by D. F. Landsberg in Kansk on 11 October 1921, said:
With the start of the noise a sort of glow appeared in the air, round in shape, about half the size of the
Moon, with a bluish tinge, flying rapidly in a direction from Filimonovo towards Irkutsk. The glow left a
trail in the form of a pale bluish stripe that extended almost the full length of its course, then gradually
vanished from the end. The glow hid itself behind the mountain without breaking up. I was unable to note
the duration of the phenomenon, but it was very short. The weather was absolutely clear and it was still.

At that same time, the flight of a heavenly body was observed in the south of the Krasnoyarsk territory, 60
km north of Minusinsk, 930 km from the site of the explosion, but moving along a different trajectory.
Roughly at the same time, an object was seen in the region of the Nizhneye-Ilimskoye settlement, 418 km
from the explosion site. And then, it has been reliably established, a heavenly body flew over the village of
Preobrazhenka, which is on the Nizhniaya (Lower) Tunguska River. And all these objects were flying in
the same direction—towards one destination: the Shishkov and Kulik blast areas and Voronov's crater!
The picture that forms from eyewitness accounts clearly shows that the objects observed from various
parts of the taiga could not have been meteorites. There were many of them and they followed different
trajectories, but towards a single point. Amazingly, the scientists and researchers who so carefully
questioned numerous witnesses were unable to spot in their accounts any difference between the
behaviour of the meteorite and that of the "terminator spheres" that closed in large numbers from different
directions in order to destroy it. It is a well known fact that the flight of a meteorite through the
atmosphere is always very short (a matter of seconds) and very fast (between 6 and 22 km per second), at
an angle to the Earth's surface along a straight trajectory, leaving a trail of fire and smoke that extends for
200 to 300 km and takes some tens of minutes to disperse.

The reports of researchers and explanations of scientists speak of a single Tunguska object. Yet the
eyewitness accounts of the event itself and the evidence gathered by researchers stubbornly indicate that
there were several objects in the sky, following different trajectories from different directions, but most
significantly moving slowly, parallel to the Earth's surface, sometimes stopping, changing course and
speed—in other words, manoeuvring—which entirely excludes the suggestion that the objects seen were
comets or meteorites. Meteorites and comets do not fly like that!
Thousands of observers could not have mistaken what they saw, as the sky was cloudless that morning.
People living within a radius of over 800 km from the place where the cosmic intruder fell observed the
unusual flight of enormous fiery bodies giving off sparks and leaving rainbow trails behind them. The
most important point, though, is that they did not all see one and the same object, but different
"terminator spheres" that varied in appearance and behaviour.
After the "terminators" were created and disgorged through the Installation's shafts, they began moving to
some control point—the place of their last reconnaissance before the destruction of the meteorite. At a
certain stage in their flight, the spheres stopped to adjust their position in respect to the falling meteorite
and then, tearing off at enormous speed and with a terrible roaring, rushed to meet it.
Below is an extract from the account of a witness who lived in the village of Moga on the Nizhniaya
Tunguska, 300 km east of the site of the explosion. It was quoted in Yury Sbitnev's book Echo and speaks
for itself.
…I remember that time well—I was eleven then. I got up quite early… It was clear and cloudless… Our
house was here, where it still stands, on a hill. I was hammering the scythe.
There I was hitting the scythe, but the sound seemed to come from elsewhere. I froze and as I listened, a
real din started. The sky was clear as can be, not a cloud in sight. There were no planes or helicopters back
then, of course. It was only later we became familiar with them. But there was this din. It wasn't like a
thunderstorm. And it kept building up, rumbling louder…
Suddenly a second sun rolled into the sky. "Ours", that's to say, was beating down on the back of my
head, and this one was in my eyes. I couldn't look; everything went black. I shot into the house and that
new sun shone in through this window here and moved across the stove like this…
The house stood, like the majority of Russian houses on the northern rivers, with its windows looking east
and south. One little window faced northwest and this "sun" was shining through it, colouring the white
wall of the big Russian stove crimson. This glow moved from right to left, towards the east. And there was
ordinary sunlight coming through the other windows and onto the other wall of the stove.
I looked at the sun blazing down on the stove through that window and my jaw dropped. I had never seen
anything like it. And the noise kept on rumbling. There was no relief. My grandfather sat on the stove and
began chanting a prayer out loud. He chanted and told me, "Stiopa, let's pray! All of you pray! It's
happened… It's come…" [The shamans had warned people about the end of the world.]
What praying? I wanted to run somewhere and there was nowhere. The noise was all around. And a fiery
ball was coming at us. It kept creeping across the stove… And then it stopped…
The fiery sphere that appeared in a clear, cloudless sky approached the earth with a growing rumble. It
grew as you watched, blazed and became so full of powerful fiery light that it was impossible to look at it.
At some elusive instant, the terrible rumbling turned into an incessant roar and the sphere stopped
moving, hanging above the ground, like the Sun hangs above the horizon just before sunset. It is hard to
establish the length of time it stopped, but the fiery sphere stayed motionless long enough for its
immobility to impress itself upon an astounded human mind.
I was afraid to look out of the window, but on the stove I could see that it had stopped. Then suddenly it
gave such a burst of speed, flashed across the stove and was gone. The thundering noise was awful. The
earth shook. I was knocked to the floor and the glass from the little window was scattered about as if
someone had pushed it in… I wasn't down on the floor for long. I jumped up, thinking, "Where's
Grandpa? Don't say he's been knocked off!" He was lying on his stomach on the very edge of the stove
and kept asking me, "Stiopa, what is it? Stiopa, what is it?" He was wet and white, white… I think the
ground was still shaking, the floor shifted under my feet, or perhaps my legs were trembling. It was
dreadful!
...Nobody could understand where it had got to, that sun. It had been shining just a moment before. And
so strong that the shadows disappeared instantly. And the light, clashing with light, stripped the world of
its familiar, pleasant shapes. Everything, from the smallest blade of grass to the cedar tree, suddenly
seemed different from how it had always been. Colours vanished; so did the usual three-dimensionality of
the world, warmth, tenderness. Our world had gone…

Judging by the details of this account, the narrator was very close to a place where a "terminator sphere"
had been generated; in other words, in the immediate proximity of one of the pillars of energy (fiery
whirlwinds) delivering the "terminator" to the surface.
The account recorded by Sbytnev includes this important element:
Someone saw a fiery pillar as well going down from that fireball, and for an instant there appeared a sort
of huge tree with a round, fiery crown. Someone noticed that this raging bundle of light spat out, as it
were, one more ball that tore earthwards. Others, though, insisted there had been no second ball, but that
blaze, that sun, itself hurled itself down slantwise.
Many saw it and there were many different versions. But everyone was agreed that the movement of that
mysterious fiery body stopped and it hung motionless for a time above the ground. And there was a
roaring… And then there was something like an explosion—the ground shaking and a rapid movement
away, taking off, and the same rumbling, but now dying down, and the fading of the raging fire—less
and less, until you could barely make it out in the vast white expanse of sky. Then it was gone and the
thunder dropped, lessened and disappeared altogether… It was there—and flew away... [author's
emphasis in bold italics]


The Olonkho Epic

Scattering a blizzard of stone,
Causing lightning to flash,
Causing a four-fold thunder to crash
Behind him,
Niurgun Bootur flew unswerving…

A careful study of the Olonkho prompts an important conclusion. Some elements of the epos describe a
pattern that precisely reflects the phases in the development of events that periodically occur above the
Siberian tundra. It becomes clear why the Olonkho texts contain such amazing echoes of the eyewitness
accounts. Here are some more lines from the Olonkho:

At a distance of three days' journey
You can see the smoke rising,
Spreading out above like a mushroom.
The land around grew covered
With dust and ash.
The smoke swirled,
Thick and black,
Rose to the sky in a dark cloud,
Obscuring the sunlight.

At different times this scenario has been witnessed by thousands of people. Among the more interesting
accounts of this nature is a report by the Dutch Ambassador, Baron de Bij, which I. V. Bogatyrev found in
the State Naval Archive of the USSR:
On 2 (13) April 1716, on the second day after the Easter festival, around 9 in the evening there appeared in
a pure, cloudless sky a most brilliant meteor, the gradual development of which is attached hereto.
In the northeastern part of the sky there rose first from the horizon a very dense cloud, pointed towards
the top and broad at the base. It rose so quickly that in no more than three minutes it reached half the
height to the zenith.
At the very moment when the dark cloud appeared, in the northwest there appeared a huge shining
comet that rose to 12º above the horizon, and then from the north another dark cloud arose, from the
west, rapidly rising to the cloud that approached it somewhat slower. Between these two clouds in the
northeast a bright light formed in the shape of a column, that for several minutes did not change its
position, while the cloud that appeared from the west moved to meet it with exceptional speed and collided
with the other cloud with such terrible force that [there was] a broad flame in the sky from their collision
and [this] was accompanied by smoke, while the glow extended from the northeast right to the west. The
real smoke ascended to 20º above the horizon, while the rays of flame intersected it constantly in all
directions, just as if there was a battle taking place between many navies and armies.
This prodigy continued for a full quarter of an hour in its most dazzling form and then began to dim little
by little and finished with the appearance of a host of bright arrows that reached to 80º above the horizon.
The cloud that had appeared in the east dispersed. After it, the other vanished completely, so that by 10 in
the evening the sky had again become clear and shone with glistening stars.
One cannot imagine how terrifying this phenomenon was at the moment when the two clouds collided,
when they both shattered, as it were, from the mighty blow, and when they were also accompanied with
exceptional speed by a host of small clouds headed westwards. The flame that flew from them was like
claps of thunder, exceptionally bright and dazzling.

High-Tech Genius behind the Installation
Analysing the consequences of the explosions that have taken place above the Siberian taiga in the past
100 years, you get a heart-wrenching sense of gratitude and awe towards the intellectual power of those
who, thousands of years ago, built a complex to defend our beautiful blue planet and all her inhabitants.
Even the first blow, struck when a meteorite is still many kilometres above the Earth, causes enough of a
deflection in its flight path to shift all that subsequently occurs, and all the consequences of the explosions
that destroy the meteorite take place away from densely populated places to a less dangerous area!




About the Author:
Valery Mikhailovich Uvarov is the head of the Department of UFO Research, Palaeosciences and
Palaeotechnology of the National Security Academy of Russia, and has devoted more than 14 years to
ufology as well as to the study of the legacy of ancient civilisations. He is the author of numerous papers
on palaeotechnology and palaeosciencce, as well as ufology and esoterica published in the Russian and
foreign press. He has initiated and participated in a number of expeditions to India and Egypt in search of
material evidence of ancient knowledge. He is a regular speaker at international ufological conferences,
and gives lectures and seminars in Russia, the UK, USA, Germany and Scandinavia. He was also a
speaker at the 2004 NEXUS Conference in Amsterdam and the 2004 NEXUS Conference in Brisbane.

Editor's Note:
See NEXUS 11/01 for the first part of Valery Uvarov's article. The accompanying bibliography will be
published in a subsequent issue.




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