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Quetsan and Nazca

Not many people know that in addition to mysterious lines drawn in the arid Nazca area of ​​Peru about 2,000 years ago, we can also find similar lines drawn many years ago in California near the town of Blythe, which has about 12,000 inhabitants.

The lines only give images if we see them from above (from a plane). Unlike Peru, where we can no longer find indigenous people directly associated with the drawings and ask them why they used them, the original inhabitants (Indians) still live in Blythe. Quetsan or Quechan, sometimes Yuma, Yuman, Kwtsan, Kwtsaan, is the name of the North American Indians living on the Fort Yuma Indian Reservation in Arizona and California. The word Yuma comes from an old name used for a group of Native American ethnic groups of the Yuman-Cochimí linguistic family.

Skeptics will certainly reject any connection between Nazca and Blythe on the grounds that Blythe is too far from Peru.

Apart from the well-known Danikin-type hypotheses that aliens are everywhere – which annoys me quite a bit, because it shows our arrogance that belittles our own ancestors – we can explain the purpose of the Nazca and Blythe lines with the following two theories:

1) The patterns correspond to star constellations.

2) The lines secretly point to some underground places.

Ancient aqueducts are really present in the Nazca region and along with these very old sky drawings they are also about 2000 years old. The underground water tunnels are accessible even today. Therefore, it is quite likely that these lines contain encrypted information (that’s why they are only visible from above) on how to find some underground spaces. Perhaps we can go further and think of these theoretical underground locations as having a connection to ancient secrets, or even pathways to Aghartha.

Nazca is a small town at the mouth of the river that flows into the Pacific Ocean; the city is about 400 km south of Lima in Peru. It is near the system of valleys and plateaus of the southern coast of Peru, where these famous drawings can be seen. Nazca is also the name used for the Nazca culture that flourished in the area sometime between 300 B.C. C. and 800 d. c.

Even today, these ancient aqueducts (underground water tunnels) are used for irrigation in the Nazca region and represent a unique piece of construction that was built by the indigenous people in Peru (Nazca) some 2,000 years ago.

Lore Cachora, the old woman from Quetsan, says that the drawings were used for rituals and since these patterns produce a complete image only from above, religious ceremonies were performed on them. The Indians used them for the same purpose that we use in our churches today. Lore Cachora further says that the figures in the drawings represent deities of Creation. One such deity is Mustamho, the grandson of Mother Earth (Pachamama) and Heavenly Father.

David Whitley, one of the leading experts on ancient drawings, also confirms this. In his opinion, the ceremonial significance of Blythe’s intaglios could have the same spiritual prism that the ancient creators of the Nazca lines possessed, but unfortunately, we cannot say this with certainty. Blythe’s intaglios definitely represent Creation, but when it comes to the Nazca lines in Peru, we don’t have enough arguments to say the same, although it’s also partly possible.

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