The mysterious
pyramid is located in the valley of the Qaidam in the province of
Qinghai. This
area is in the western part of China, and
is photographed by a satellite from NASA. A team of Chinese scientists is going
there to explore the mysterious pyramid that local legend says is a launch tower
left by aliens from space. The building is popular called the "the ET relics"
among the locals.
The communist
political newspaper (China's
state-run Xinhua agency - "People Daily") reports that scientists are going to
the mountains in Himalaya on a unique expedition.
They are searching for evidence of visit from aliens.
On
Mount
Baigong in the
Chinese Qinghai-province, about 3000 meters above the ocean, stands a mysterious
building, shaped as a pyramid. It's so unique that the Chinese scientists think
is well worth to go there. The locals are convinced that the pyramid is built by
aliens. According to the Chinese newspaper "People Daily", do someone meat that
the building is a base for shooting out spaceship.
The area is high
above the ocean, and the air is thin. The building is located by a lake, and
it's between 50 and 60 metres high. The pyramid has three caves with triangular
openings on its facade and is filled with red-hued pipes leading into the
mountain and a nearby salt water lake, according to the Chinese newspaper
Xinhua. Rusty iron scraps, pipes and unusually shaped stones are scattered
around the inhospitable and largely uninhabited area. So far no date has been
indicated for the big construction.
Would we
humans finally find evidence for visit from the aliens
now?
Stein Morten
Lund, 29 July
2002
Additional
information
UFO News,
Interesting UFO and Alien Case files
Editor, B. J.
Booth, email,
www.ufocasebook.com/62902.html
Geographical
location:
The province
lies on the northeastern part of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau in west
China,
bordering Gansu and
Sichuan provinces,
Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region and Tibet Autonomous Region. As the origin of
the Yangtze, Yellow, and Lancang rivers, Qinghai has an area
of 720,000 square kilometres, the fourth largest in
China. Its
territory includes 3.86 million hectares of grassland, 590,000 hectares of
cultivated land and 266,000 hectares of forest
Read more about
the Qinghai-province here:
www.china.org.cn/e-xibu/2JI/3JI/qinghai/qing-ban.htm