Mohenjo Daro (lit. Mound of the Dead, Sindhi: موئن جو دڙو,
pronounced), situated in the province of Sindh, Pakistan, was one of the
largest settlements of the ancient Indus Valley Civilization. Mohenjo
Daro was built around 2600 BC and and continued to exist till about 1800
BC. The ruins of the city were discovered in 1922 by Rakhaldas
Bandyopadhyay, an officer of the Archaeological Survey of India. He was
led to the mound by a Buddhist monk, who believed it to be a stupa. In
the 1930s, massive excavations were conducted under the leadership of
John Marshall, K. N. Dikshit, Ernest Mackay, and others.
When excavations of Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro reached the street
level, they discovered skeletons scattered about the cities, many
holding hands and sprawling in the streets as if some instant, horrible
doom had taken place. People were just lying, unburied, in the streets
of what once happened to be a sprawling metropolis. And these skeletons
are thousands of years old, even by traditional archaeological
standards. What could cause such a thing? Why did the bodies not decay
or get eaten by wild animals? Furthermore, there is no apparent cause of
a physically violent death. These skeletons are among the most
radioactive ever found, on par with those at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. An
ancient, heavily populated city in Pakistan seemed to have been
instantly destroyed 2,000 years before Christ by an incredible explosion
that could only been caused by an atomic bomb.
At one site, Soviet scholars found a skeleton which had a radioactive
level 50 times greater than normal. Other cities have been found in
northern India that show indications of explosions of great magnitude.
One such city, found between the Ganges and the mountains of Rajmahal,
seems to have been subjected to intense heat. Huge masses of walls and
foundations of the ancient city are fused together, literally vitrified!
And since there is no indication of a volcanic eruption at Mohenjo-Daro
or at the other cities, the intense heat to melt clay vessels can only
be explained by an atomic blast or some other unknown weapon. The cities
were wiped out entirely.
The David Davenport Angle to Mohenjo Daro Extinction [Quotes adapted directly from his works]
An ancient, heavily populated city in Pakistan was instantly
destroyed 2,000 years before Christ by an incredible explosion that
could only been caused by an atomic bomb. That’s the mind bogging
conclusion of a British researcher, David Davenport, who spent 12 years
studying ancient Hindu scripts and evidence at the site where the great
city – Mohenjo Daro once stood. What was found at the site of Mohenjo
Daro corresponds exactly to Nagasaki, declared Davenport, who published
his startling findings in an amazing book, “Atomic Destruction in 2000
B.C.”, Milan, Italy, 1979.
There was an epicenter about 50 yards wide where everything was
crystallized, fused or melted, he said. Sixty yards from the center the
bricks are melted on one side indicating a blast. the horrible,
mysterious event of 4,000 years ago that leveled Mohenjo Daro was
recorded in an old Hindu manuscript called the Mahabharata, “White
hot smoke that was a thousand times brighter than the sun rose in
infinite brilliance and reduced the city to ashes, the account reads.
Water boiled…horses and war chariots were burned by the thousands.. .
the corpses of the fallen were mutilated by the terrible heat so that
they no longer looked like human beings…”. The description concludes, “it was a terrible sight to see … never before have we seen such a ghastly weapon”.
Based on his study of many ancient manuscripts, Davenport believes
that the end of Mohenjo Daro was tied to a state of war between the
Aryans and the Dravidian. Aryans controlled regions where space aliens
were mining minerals and exploiting other natural resources, he
believes. Because it was a Dravidian city, the aliens had agreed to
destroy Mohenjo Daro on behalf of the Aryans. The aliens needed the
friendship of the Aryan kings so that they could continue their
prospecting and research, explained Davenport. The texts tell us that
30,000 inhabitants of the city were given seven days to get out – a
clear warning that everything was about to be destroyed. Obviously, some
people didn’t heed the warning, because 44 human skeletons were found
there in 1927, just a few years after the city was discovered.
All the skeletons were flattened to the ground. For example, a
father, mother and child were found flattened in the street, face down
and still holding hands. Interestingly, the ancient texts refer
repeatedly to the Vimanas, or the flying cars, which fly under their own
power, he added. Davenport’s intriguing theory has met with intense
interest in the scientific community. Nationally known expert William
Sturm said, “the melting of bricks at Mohenjo Daro could not have been
caused by a normal fire”. Added professor Antonio Castellani, a space
engineer in Rome, “it’s possible that what happened at Mohenjo Daro was
not a natural phenomenon”.
David Davenport, who spent 12 years studying ancient Hindu
scripts and evidence at the ancient site of Mohenjo-Daro, declared in
1996 that the city was instantly destroyed around 2,000 BC. The city
ruins reveal the explosion’s epicenter which measures 50 yards wide. At
that location everything was crystallized, fused or melted. Sixty yards
from the center the bricks were melted on one side indicating a blast…
the horrible mysterious event of 4000 years ago was recorded in the
Mahabharata.
How did man 2000 tears before Christ have the the knowledge of not
only producing such high degree of heat, but also harness the power of
such high temperatures? If Mohanjo Daro was destroyed by a nuclear
catastrophe, who designed and manufactured them? If not then what was
used to produce such heat that vitrified rock and bricks? What could be
attributed to the high degree of radioactive traces in the skeletons?
How did all of them die, in one instant? Its up to us whether we need
answers to these questions or continue to live in a sanitized view of
the world, as provided to us by mainstream scholarship.
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