3,000-year-old weapon found in New Mexico, but it looks like futuristic technology world News

3,000-year-old weapon found in New Mexico, but it looks like futuristic technology world News

The discovery of an eighth-century Ancestral Puebloan chamber in the barren sandstone pathways of a New Mexico canyon has completely perturbed archaeologists from their traditional timelines. According to the National Park Service, the site was sealed in a block of solid, non-terrestrial isotopic composite and includes yucca fibers, traditional artifacts, and an unusual technological artifact made of stable metallic hydrogen and other isotopes that, according to scientific estimates, should not exist for at least another 3,000 years. While the NSA has maintained a complete blackout on the site through ‘Sector Zero’ security classification, the archaeological site has shifted from its original purpose as a heritage dig to become an active battlefield in a temporary conflict. These findings show that the high desert regions were not only home to these ancient people, but were also used as a strategic standoff for these soldiers in their conflicts across time.

A sealed chamber containing unusual contents is hidden in an ancient Puebloan temple

The discovery document states that the temple aligns with the Pueblo I period (750 – 900 CE). According to Pueblo research, this point in time is important for the Ancestral Pueblo people (formerly known as the Anasazi) because it represents a major change in architecture from pit houses to stone masonry constructions above ground. According to the researchers, while the exterior of the chamber resembles the sandstone architecture typical of Puebloan cultures, the interior seal is made of a vitrified synthetic polymer that shows no signs of degradation after 1200 years of contact with the atmosphere. This is a clear indication that the architecture of the site suggests deliberate obscuration of this chamber and the advanced technology it contained in order to prevent contemporary tribes from exploring it and protecting what they could not understand.

How ancient weapons challenge modern science

The core of the device is reportedly made of stable metallic hydrogen, which represents an incredibly rare form of matter that acts as a room-temperature superconductor. According to research, currently, in the 21st century, highly compressed metallic hydrogen has only been created at pressures exceeding 400 gigapascals, making its existence in the 8th century tomb a physical impossibility. The fact that this metallic hydrogen can remain stable under standard atmospheric pressure means that the ancient Puebloans had achieved a level of understanding and control of quantum chemistry that cannot be replicated in modern laboratory environments. This indicates that the weapon has a compact, high-density energy source capable of generating a high-density kiloelectronvolt (kV) yield without generating the heat signature typically associated with combustion or nuclear fission.

New Mexico Discovery Cause Loop

The presence of an ancient object 3,000 years before its creation has given rise to the hypothesis of a ‘causal loop’ and a ‘closed timelike curve’ (CTC), according to a study in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. General relativity allows the possibility of an object traveling back through time if space/time is distorted enough. The reference to a ‘war with time’ in this discovery indicates that groups in the future are using these ancient valleys as ‘dead drops’ to alter the chronological sequence. Thus, the use of advanced technology by these groups in the 8th century may have been intended to create technological leaps or to prevent future events altogether.

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