Whales are moving to new locations, and dying off, at a great rate. Some may be moving because they sense a change of temperature in the deep ocean, while others are dying off in their traditional waters due to toxins and noise pollution.

A large number of endangered sperm whales are making a home in the Gulf of Mexico, near the dangerously busy mouth of the Mississippi River, a few miles from the Louisiana coast. Sperm whales usually hunt far out in the ocean and it is unusual for them to remain so close to shore. Also, the presence of the approximately 500 of these creatures, some of them bigger than a Greyhound bus, presents a danger to the supertankers, barges, trawlers and warships in the area?and the ships could prove dangerous to the whales.
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An Italian geologist maintains that the fabled monster of Loch Ness is nothing more than hot volcanic air, and he has sent ripples around the shores of the deep lake in order to test his theory. Luigi Piccardi, a seismologist from Florence, says the legend of Nessie, which dates back nearly 1,500 years, could be the result of a major geological fault that runs beneath the lake?s dark waters.

The Great Glen Fault, which runs the entire length of Britain?s largest lake, in the heart of the Scottish Highlands, is one of the country?s few still active volcanic areas. Piccardi says that it is bound to have produced sinister rumblings and hot bubbles of gas over the centuries, giving birth to stories of monsters living in its depths.
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The indigenous people of Bolivia?s highlands have legends of a lost underwater city called Wanaku. It existed on a mysterious island in Lake Titicaca, the world?s highest lake, and had a hidden entrance to underground passageways that had been built by the Incas. Now those legends may be coming true.

Explorers have made 250 dives in the area and discovered a 2,300-foot-long road, now under water. At the end of the road they found the remains of a 660-foot-wide stone temple that is 65 to 100 feet below the surface of the water. They also discovered a terrace, a 2,600-foot-long wall, a stone anchor, vases and bones from animals that might have been sacrificed. The ruins date from 1,000 to 1,500 years ago.
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Whitley Strieber will be appearing on Coast-to-Coast AM on the night of July 9-10. He’ll be discussing alien abductions and reading from rarely heard and seen letters that paint a picture of this experience that is totally different from what the UFO community says is happening.

Be prepared to be amazed. These stories are stranger by hundreds of percent than the strangest things you have ever heard in your life–but they’re being told by people just like you.

What do they mean? Listen to Whitley’s thoughts on this matter.

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