Shaw Henson, replying to a recent message from Jay Phillips, surfaces a frightening theory about post-XM-era...

Shaw Henson, replying to a recent message from Jay Phillips, surfaces a frightening theory about post-XM-era intelligence gathering, as well as an interesting find from an Operation Essex member about Navarro's hidden past...
http://investigate.ingress.com/2017/04/29/navarros-golden-roots/

Comments

  1. Yik Sheng Lee​​​​​​ I wouldn't look 400 years ago at Navarro*.. I would look 800 - 1000 years ago at Pueblo. The reason being that it took 400 years for the Aztec to travel from Aztlan to Mehicah meaning it's possible that the Anazktec were the initial migrationary wave out of the region. It is possible that an unknown lost tribe from Aztlan^ related to the anazktec may have settled there, however since the natives in the region all spoke a language that was unique to northern California, it is possible they may not related to the Anazktec.

    Looking 400 years ago at Navarro will only allow you a glance into the lives of the natives since that area was not settled by europeans until the 1840s. The funny thing about Californian history, that few people understand is that before 1840s the non native population of the area was under 10,000 (closer to 8,000), it then instantaneously grew to 100,000 after the US captured California during the Mexican-American war and gold was discovered.


    *Note, It should be noted that many of the natives in the region were rounded up and put on a death March during 1860s. If any XM artifacts existed in the region and were held by the tribal bands, they may have been stolen during that period of time.

    ^I wonder if there was a third great native American city? It's kind of strange that Pueblo was abandoned in ~1200 AD and Cahokia in ~1300 AD.

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  2. Mario Valenzuela II now that you mention it...
    A recent find had me pondering it's connection to all of this. I'll post it shortly.

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  3. Yik Sheng Lee​​​ the Spanish raided and razed the whole of central America and the South American Continent based on the knowledge and intel given to Cortez from La Malinche. Given that Spain and the church went crazy in their exploration of the new world, I'm pretty sure the cache of XM artifacts De Soto stole from the Anazktec was just the tip of the iceberg of artifacts that be came into the Spanish crown and Vatican's possession (assuming that's where they ended up).

    But while we are focusing on De Soto, remember he spent 1539 to 1542 searching the American South East and the gulf coast for a rumored city of fortunes and a place to set up a colony. The Anazktec were not the only cultures he encounter, tried to slaughter, of pillaged from. Who knows what anomalous zones he ventured into during this time and what he decided not to included into his travel log.

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