Yes.

Yes.  I have been doing a great deal of research and frankly staying out of plain sight.  At moments, it seems that this is all coming together in a very coherent picture, and then at other moments it is more elusive than ever.  

Here is what I know that is relevant to this topic.

A simple survey of American Alternative Literature of what is called the 'Pulp' era would tell us that H.P. Lovecraft (HPL) and Robert E. Howard (REH) communicated about a secret book or language or society.  Howard wrote a story called Valley of the Lost which, I believe is set in Texas, near his home.  It appears that in some lost missive Lovecraft and Howard discussed looking for a 'mine' or 'cave'.  

My suspicion is that Howard did it and found an Anomaly or glyphs of unknown origin. Or both.  The FD reference in one of the documents was probably not Flint Dille, as somebody suggested, but Frank Dobie a folklorist and historian. 

The San Saba Mines are nearby. They may or may not have a connection to this, but somehow the Valley of the Lost and the Lost San Saba Mines are swirling in my head.

Interestingly, there is a redacted archeological text.  I remember reading it when I was younger, at UCLA, about the Naztika.  They were another tribe that appeared to be building a civilization in that area, went underground and into caves and then vanished...

... Until rediscovered by the son of a Russian astronomer, Yuri Alarak Nagassa, who, curiously was a member of the Niantic Project in CERN and I believe is still being held in an investigation.

Comments

  1. An XM researcher with an Astronomy background studying underground evidence of past civilizations feels a lot like the activity in Congo a few months back.  Its not the same tune certainly but it feels like the lyrics rhyme.

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  2. Mike Wissinger If it feels very similar, I'm sure you've reached the very likely conclusion of what will be discovered at Cross Plains.

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  3. ok Edgar Allan Wright I am trying to follow your research and work through the pieces you have provided - I am a little stuck on Naztika - can you share a little more on where you got your information on that and how that links to Dr. Nagassa (or is that redacted text the only thing mentioning this lost tribe?). There is so much to sort through, if you could point me in the direction of that mention.  I remember reading Yuri talking about the Anazktec tribe and the Mayans - but when did he work on the Naztika ?  I am having trouble finding anything so far really under that name (well except some urban language which is not so nice) - although I did find this reference to a modification of that word

    Technically, in Hindu philosophy the term Āstika refers only to acceptance of authority of Vedas, not belief in the existence of God.[6] However, though not accepted universally, Āstika is sometimes translated as "theist" and Nāstika as "atheist", assuming the rejection of Vedas to be synonymous to the rejection of God.[7] In Indian philosophy, three schools of thought are commonly referred to as nastika for rejecting the doctrine of Vedas: Jainism, Buddhism and Cārvāka

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