Anne Strieber’s new diary tells the horrifying story of agroup of scientists who knew hours before the tsunami struckthat it was going to be extremely dangerous, but were unableto communicate their knowledge to the proper authorities inthe countries involved.

Then she discusses the work of Dr. Lonnie Thompson that isreported by Linda Howe on Dreamland this week. Dr. Thompsonhas discovered an incident of sudden climate change thatdevastated the world 5,200 years ago. AND he has discoveredthat it started world wide at terrifying speed. But are hiswarnings being heeded? Despite all his prestige and his longrecord of superb professional achievement, they are not.

Do not miss this powerful diary entry!Click here.
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Archeologists have a new interpretation of Macchu Picchu, known as the magical “lost city” of the Incas. To get their new evidence, they didn’t have to travel to Peru?they simply dug for artifacts in the basement of the Peabody Museum of Natural History at Yale.

Explorer Hiram Bingham III came upon the deserted city in 1911. Ever since then, archeologists have been trying to figure out what a large city was doing 6,750 feet up in the mountains. Some thought the Incas built it when they fled the European invasion. Others thought it was an ancient spiritual center.
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A huge collection of ancient engraved stones, containing over 15,000 images, was found in a cave in the Peruvian desert in the early 1960’s. They show details of a lost civilization that knew about medical transplants and advanced technology. Animals are depicted, including images of dinosaurs. The stones show different human races, lost continents, and knowledge of an ancient global catastrophe. Early Spanish chronicles described similar stones found in ancient tombs. They’re kept in the Ica Stones Museum in Ica, Peru.
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A flood caused by a crack in a glacier may destroy the city of Huaraz in Peru. The crack has been spotted by a space satellite in a glacier high in the Peruvian Andes that feeds into Lake Palcacocha, at the top of a valley that leads down to the city. Huaraz has a population of 60,000. NASA says, “Should the large glacier chunk break off and fall into the lake, the ensuing flood could hurtle down?reaching Huaraz and its population of 60,000 in less than 15 minutes,” meaning there will be no warning. Glacier expert John Reynolds says, “It’s an ongoing manifestation of climate change.”
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