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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 north - west there appeared a huge shining comet that rose to 12° above the horizon, and then from the north another dark cloud arose, from the west, rapidly rising to the cloud that approached it some - what 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 20° 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 80° 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. Scattering a blizzard of stone, Causing lightning to flash, Causing a four-fold thunder to crash Behind him, Niurgun Bootur flew unswerving... 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! Rantinund navi iscun 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. 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 civilisa- tions. 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 interna- tional 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. At different times this scenario has been witnessed by thou- sands 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 festi - val, around 9 in the evening there appeared in a pure, cloudless sky a most brilliant meteor, the gradual development of which is attached hereto. 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. NEXUS +57 Continued next issue ... DECEMBER 2004 — JANUARY 2005 www.nexusmagazine.com