Unfortunately, the livestock deaths have continued to present day.įurther west in New Mexico, Colorado, Arizona, Utah, and Nevada, mutilations are so common that most go unreported. “This thing will probably end with the vernal equinox which is the same day as Easter,” said John Dunn, president of the Oklahoma Cattlemen’s Association. The mutilations were making mainstream news the Maedition of the New York Times reported that ranchers along the Texas/Oklahoma border believe the relentless mutilations were the work of Satanist cults. In Kansas, thousands of cattle turned up dead - enough that there was an FBI investigation in 1975. The 1894 Kansas UFO/Cattle Mutilation is perhaps the earliest recorded event, but mutilation activity ramped up in the 1970s. Arkansas had its share of cattle mutilations, and a history of UFOs first reported as the Arkansas airship mystery. Missouri cattle mutilations, beginning in 1975, continue to be reported. The documented methods, regardless of location, are virtually identical the removal of genitals and bowels, eyes, and sometimes ears with surgical precision and a complete absence of blood. These sacred sites are called “Sipapu.”įor decades, ranchers in the 37th zone have been frustrated and confounded by loss of livestock to mutilations. The Tewa people identify a location near the Great Sand Dunes Monument in Colorado’s San Luis Valley as their place of emergence. Native people all have ancient “star people” stories many tribes, including the Dine (Navajo), Apache, Pueblo, Hopi, and Santa Clara, all tell creation stories that include their people being brought to the earth’s surface at locations along the 37th - generally in Chaco Canyon (New Mexico) and the Grand Canyon (Arizona). Mystery airships were reported in Arkansas, Nebraska, Missouri, Texas, Kansas, and Kentucky in the late 1890s. saw the sky fill with a pale blue light as a large object moved overhead it was followed by three “red and glowing balls” in July, 1860 according to the Wilmington Tribune. The lights did not move for 30-minutes, but expanded and contracted in size several times. Students reported that one looked like a moon - the other like a star. Luminous objects were spotted near the rising sun at Burritt College in Tennessee on June 1, 1853. “The Joplin Spook Light,” also called the “Tri-State Spook Light” and the “Ozark Spook Light” was first noted in 1836 - it was seen by native people on the Trail of Tears in Missouri and Oklahoma. In 2010, homes below the 37th were more likely to be upside-down on mortgages.Īnomalies along the 37th have been reported since the 19th century - and earlier, if you include reports from indigenous people. This may have to do with lower amounts of sunlight north of the line, as MS seems to be related to a lack of vitamin D. The phenomena zone stretches about 70 miles either side of the 37th - roughly, the area between the 36th and 38th parallels, 150 miles of anomalous real estate.Ī few odd facts about the 37th: Americans living north of the 37th parallel are twice as likely to develop multiple sclerosis than those who live south. ” From sea to shining sea, this line on the map is littered with histories of cattle mutilations, UFO sightings, reports of underground military bases, and ancient native sacred sites. Stretching from the Chesapeake Bay to Santa Cruz, CA, the 37th Parallel has been called the “UFO Highway” and the “ Paranormal Highway. Tie a string to the pin and and stretch it across the map to the Pacific Ocean, south of San Jose, CA. Drop a pin at the Atlantic Ocean border between Virginia and North Carolina on a U.S.
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