Sunday, April 21, 2024

The Mystery of Mount Urraca

 In the northern US state of New Mexico there is a small table mountain called Urraca Mesa, which is associated with many strange stories, legends and tales. Various Indian tribes have settled around this mountain for thousands of years - the Navajo, Apache, Pueblo (also called Anasazi) - and in the folklore of each of them, the mountain is mentioned as a place where strange and terrifying things constantly happen.

In particular, many stories tell about the sudden, mysterious disappearance of the Pueblo tribe several hundred years ago. Even historians still don't know what happened to them. They were either killed by other tribes or fled in a hurry, fearing someone. Shamans say that in those days a fierce battle took place on the top of Urraca between humans and evil entities from the Underworld. And many people died in this battle, including all the Anasazi, before the humans finally won and drove the spirits back underground, sealing the entrance.

Since then, it has been said that somewhere on the top of Urraca there is a hidden portal to some other world. And it's almost impossible to find it because it's not visible to the average person. But every now and then something still leaks out of it. In 2003, the story of a tourist who went alone to the top of Urraca, pitched a tent there and fell asleep became popular on the Internet. During the night, he woke up to heavy rain and when he looked outside, he saw a completely different and much more terrifying sight.

He saw a vertical blue line appear about a meter above the ground, which then "collapsed like a curtain," and from this "portal" emerged riders on horses, looking like classic Indians from Western movies. The tourist was terrified and fled in panic, leaving all his belongings behind. And then he fell into the barbed wire of a cattle fence, was seriously injured, and narrowly avoided bleeding to death, he claimed. What happened to these riders afterwards, he did not know.

From time to time, the Internet also receives messages from other curious tourists who dared to climb the peak of Urraca. They said they saw an old Indian shaman there, sometimes even glowing with blue light, or blue balls floating in the air. A herd of ghost horses has been seen many times in the area of ​​Mount Urraca, and in the 1940s, one of the scouts disappeared without a trace on this mountain. Since then, tourists sometimes report the ghostly silhouette of a boy in a scout uniform who cries loudly in the evenings and tries to approach their campfire. And when people try to help him, the boy moans "I can't" and disappears.

There have also been reports of sightings of "demonic creatures" at the top of Urraca, including a black figure the size of a 7-year-old child that obsessively watches hikers while hiding behind trees. Others claimed to have encountered strange people "in out-of-date clothes", as well as animals whose appearance did not seem completely normal. There is even an opinion that the portal on Mount Urraca, with its strong energy field, affects the genotype of local animals and plants, changing, disfiguring and harming them.

Serious scientists have also tried to study Urraca's anomalies. In 1968, geologist F. Leo Misaki arrived here and discovered that it was rich in iron and magnetite, which might explain why lightning was so common during storms, as well as the nature of the mysterious blue glow in the air. However, Misaki ultimately concluded that "there is no simple explanation for these geochemical anomalies."

On this part of the mountain, which has the shape of a high and almost vertical rock, there are many geoglypse left here many centuries ago by local Indians. Unfortunately, no photos of these drawings can be found online, but it is claimed that some of them depict strange "inhuman" creatures. Does Mount Urraca hide a mysterious portal to another dimension? Was it because of him that the mysterious Pueblo tribe disappeared? And what else could be hiding there? These are questions that still have no clear answer.

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