[ NARRATOR ] 00:15:43
But gigantic geoglyphs are the only mystery surrounding Nazca?
[ERICH VON DANIKEN (德系口音)
AUTHOR, CHARIOTS OF THE GODS] 00:15:50
I was flying around Nazca for days, hanging out the aircraft with a camera and shooting and shooting and shooting, I have more or less about 4000 pictures of Nazca, this is really fascinating. You see, this is one of the pictures which prove that this mountain was made flat artificially. Because you compare with the mountains around there, there the mountain's cap abrupt from both sides, here,it goes flat, this is absolutely incredible, this is ... one of the most craziest pictures I made about Nazca.
[ GIORGIO A. TSOUKALOS (爆炸头哥)
PUBLISHER, LEGENDARY TIMES MAGAZINE ]00'16'20
The crazything is, the rubble, the remains, of that summit, or the mountain top, gone! It's nowhere, it's not in the valley down below, it's nowhere in the region.what happened to it? Because all the mountains around it have their summits,it's there, and then you have other mountains, that are, as flat as table, with bends on top of that look like runways.
[ NARRATOR ] 00:16:52
Another question, why would visiting E.T.s, be drawn to the bonedry desert of Peru?
[ GIORGIO A. TSOUKALOS (爆炸头哥)
PUBLISHER, LEGENDARY TIMES MAGAZINE ]00'17'00
Let's just sayit hypothetically, that a spaceship arrives here on planet Earth, and you want to quickly find out what this planet consists of, [then] Nazca would be perfectplace to go and visit for some sampling, and for some experimentation, becauseNazca still today, is one of the most abundant areas in the world regarding rawmaterials. There you find everything, you find gold, you find Eh...Eh...Uranium, what have you it's.. it's basically the cliff notes of planet Earth.You go to Nazca and you immediately know everything about what our planetconsists of, because all the raw materials converge there at highvolumes...
[ JAVIERGRILLO-MARXUACH
SCIENCE FICTION WRITER/PRODUCER ] 00'17'58
Why do we have to believe that this simplycould not be an expression of an artistic impose , you know, is it really that our inlandish to believe that... you know, Eh...that...these natives in Peru might have wanted to create some large scale work of art, and...and...to saythat such a large scale work of art could not have been created merely for the possibility of having created it rather than in a Nazca lines are so inhumanly vast, that it can only be admired by people who are capable of flight.
Or you know, you could say the same thingabout the Great Wall of China, and yet the Great Wall of China has a purposethat is ... that is political, that is Marshall. Somebody might have walked the Nazca lines as spiritual labyrinth in the shape of a spiritual totemic objectand we are in their own way supposed to get a kind of epiphany from that. The fact that we don't understand the purpose of a thing opens us a tremendous speculation.
[ ERICH VONDANIKEN (德系口音)
AUTHOR, CHARIOTS OF THE GODS] 00:19:00
Nazca and Nazca figures make no sign seeing from the earth. You have to fly over it. Thesigns are made for somebody flies, there's no way out of this, I hope archeologists sooner or later will come to similar conclusion.
[ NARRATOR ] 00:19:23
But if visitors from other planets were thought to be gods, wouldn't there be written acounts of them? Perhaps the answer can be foundright in front of us, in one of the most shocking places of all.
[ BackgroundText ] 00:19:37
The Holy Bible.
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