Earths Forbidden Secrets By Maxwell Igan

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civilizations of the Andes. It has also been adequately confirmed by scholars that the Andean
civilization did indeed sprout from Lake Titicaca and Cuzco.
This enigmatic wand object given to Manco Capac, an object which enabled him to found a
city, has always been depicted as resembling a short pole with an offset triangular head. Judging
from all the existing depictions of this wand, it is now agreed by most scholars that it was in fact
an object greatly resembling an axe or mattock. So it then seems highly likely that the ceremony
actually involved the presentation of tools and the knowledge of how to use them. Certainly such
a gift would have been much more beneficial in the founding of a city than any type of wand that
comes to mind. Many of the illustrations we are shown of Manco Capac also re-enforce this
conclusion (fig.135). A great deal of significance is placed on this presentation of tools in the
legend and the fact that it was tools that were being presented on the celebrated occasion also
strongly suggests that Quetzalcoatl had another agenda other than merely the founding of a city.


Fig.135

Quetzalcoatl telling Manco Capac to found a city at a place where his axe or mattock would
“sink into the ground” also suggests a need to find a place to dig. Manco Capac may have well
been told to find a suitable place to build a city in a location conducive to the commencement of
mining or tunneling operations.
The Sumerian account translated by Sitchin has led him to believe that the entire Cuzco and
Tiahuanaco facilities were set up as sophisticated ore refining facilities involved mainly with the
collection and shipment of gold to Nibiru and the refining manufacture and distribution of bronze
due to ongoing troubles that had been manifesting in Mesopotamia at the time. Surprisingly, there
is a substantial amount of evidence to re-enforce this conclusion.
Quite noticeably, many stones at the site do actually still have traces of ‘H’ shaped bronze
‘clamps’ that were used in places to keep the blocks in place by fitting into special ┤shaped
cutouts in the blocks themselves (fig.136). At yet we are repeatedly told by academics that the
only metal the Indians used was gold and that they used no metal tools. So how then did the
bronze clamps found in Mayan ruins come into being? Clamps that have been found in Mayan
ruins are incidentally, exactly the same as those that have been found in Mesopotamia, even

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