TreasureNet - The Original Treasure Hunting Website! White's Metal Detectors - See What's In The Ground Before You Dig! Western & Eastern Treasures Magazine! J.W. Fisher Metal Detectors! Kellyco Metal Detectors! Your Ad Here! Opal Auctions!
Previous Member Finds!Recommend A Post! Recent Treasures Found By TreasureNet Members! Control the images you see!
US 2.5 Gold Coin!!!!!!!!!!!!! Wahoo !!!!!! A dream comes true !!!! Hafted with asphaltum, indian point... preserved! 1877 Indian. WOW Anglo-Saxon sceat Rare Revolutionary War Officer's Button & Colonial Counterstamped Silver 2000 YEAR OLD CELTIC GOLD STATER! "She" was a "He", and it didn't say Liberty I JUST PAID FOR MY DETECTOR !!! Celtic bronze coin...


This forum has been discontinued.
Please use our new forum
Follow Ups - Post Followup - Current Messages - FAQ - Your Ad Here

Re: lost enigmas-steve
April 13, 1999 at 19:00:17
In Reply to: You nailed it
posted by Steve on April 13, 1999 at 11:32:45

Hi again Steve, I am not blessed with a historical credential. This allows me to use a large degree of license in these investigations, because no one will believe me anyway and who cares? After the Sir Francis Drake incident, I got the message and I no longer seek credibility. What you just stated ties up a lot of history at one small time scan. Beginning with 1680: I believe that this is the first demonstration of the organized unity of the Indians. After they had scattered or murdered most of the Spanish miners and priests in the area. They meticulously closed, back filled and replanted the soil above old Spanish mines. You should see the famous Lost Padre mine in California. Nine out of ten people can't see it, but someone familiar with natural plant growth can spot it in a second. This is the mine that houses at least the bullion and plate from five California missions and I suspect some missions in Arizona as well. Frank Fish was looking for this mine. Opps, I went adrift. The Indians should have retained their stamina and kept the Spanish out of their lands, but I guess the need for the Virgin Mary was to great, as they missed the church. Still today Indians are very devout Catholics even after all of the pain they had suffered. This isn't easy to appreciate from my stand point? So you are very correct, as I see it. Old Spanish mines are VERY hard to find! Should we talk about Marcos de Niza three hundred year earlier in the Aztec fulcrum of change? Well if they, at Treasure Net, don't boot me out of here, I'll continue. NERS is a window in time. NERS presents a land mass to be studied and this usually opens up a closed in time and history window. Fortunately, Steve, the history books helped me here, or I would be dead in the water. You stated that Marcos de Niza may have been the first to use deceit to the king and authorities? I say yes and no. Yes, it is true that most historians believe that he saved his skin by lying about the Seven Cities Of Cibola and no, because he really knew something, but he didn't know where. Marcos really didn't understand the communications communicated to him, so he said, Hey, guys find the seven golden cities of gold and you will have your treasure. A very true statement, but it sounded like a fairly tale them as well as now. How so? Let's walk back a few years, shall we? The Aztec stormed Cortez out of their empire, because they knew he was not the flesh God Quetzalcoatl returning in the flesh. At this time, Cortez took one fifth of the Treasure for the Kings portion. This is why the only golden plate they have down there, I am told, is warped distorted masks that the Spanish soldiers wore around their waste bands, where they could fight as they fled the empire. There could be some variance in this story? Cortez was commander and administer of New Spain and he couldn't take time to mess with the Treasure issue then. During that time, priests were tortured and murdered for information. Little was learned, except Aztec would die say nothing.. Finally, for some reason, they said, find the Seven Cities Of Cibola and there you will find your Treasure. Cortez said Gosh, Marco de Niza said the same thing too. If Cortez and later Coronado would have taken time to interview and study the Aztec pagans that they hated, there would be no Treasure story to tell and no Treasure to find. How so? Because the answer to this riddle where the Aztec depository is, is in Aztec Mythology. Pardon me as I stumble through this, I am not the one that should do this. But, I may be the only one in the world that knows this information however? When the 1,500 man caravan left Tenochtitlan, one man was chosen to lead this expedition. The Aztec, I found, were different than most people in this way. Their religion and life are one. This meant that all things in life HAD TO FULFILL AZTEC MYTHOLOGY. This is a key to the understanding this enigma, as we will see soon. Suppose the king lined up 20 Aztec warriors. Suppose the king chose number 3 to lead the golden caravan?. If the King had chosen number nineteen instead, the gold would have gone to the same place. How so, you might ask? Because they had the same believe that mythology HAD TO BE FULFILLED. So off we go searching for the gold. Where do we look? We can't look south, east or west because the Spanish had control of area. North is the only direction they could go. Well, there are hundreds of miles north. Where North? Fortunately, modern history gives us some clues. We know that the Ute Indians assisted the Aztec on their plight out of compassion. We know that in some strange way the Utes are related to the Aztec. I'm not clear why or how, just that is seems to be true. We know about Freddy Crystal and his Utah White Mountain search. So the area of the Aztec depository is pretty clear. When I found the temple 14 years ago, I went home to the public library and spent 30 minutes thumbing through Aztec picture books, and there the temple was as clear as day. But the temple the book called out was in Tenochtitlan square not in Utah. How queer I muttered to myself? I know what I had found a probably worth billions in a-one-of-a-kind collection of it's kind, like King Tut collection. This final part really took some time to figure out until I studied Aztec mythology a little. You may disagree with this.. Here is the riddle. Are you ready for it????? This is what the Spanish and all Treasure Hunters have been looking for, for the past almost 500 years. Here it is: Ahem, the Aztec took the gold from the false flesh God Quetzalcoatl and hand carried that Treasure over 2,000 miles to, once again, return the Treasure to the symbol of Quetzalcoatl. Now wasn't that simple? You say, no, what do I mean? I mean the Aztec Depository will be found at the seventh of seven peaks and the symbol of Quetzalcoatl the cone shaped peak. Go get it Treasure Hunters. Steve, I hope this was entertaining to you. I would love to see this in a movie. The Aztec moment has come. You remember how touching the Titanic story was? If you know of anyone interested in making a movie of this, please give them my name. True history is far better than any fiction, to me. Richard


Follow Ups:


Post a Followup

This forum has been discontinued - please use our new forum

Comments:




Posted By: spider-te023.proxy.aol.com - 152.163.195.183 - April 13, 1999 at 19:00:17


Copyright 1998 All rights reserved.