Is man on the point of a unique world or simply stuck on a circular treadmill reiterating the doomed tasks from past which he never looks to learn? An increasing numeral of intellectuals acknowledge the world’s ghastly infatuation with nuclear war is just the latest repetition in a succession of blunders human technology seems
tormented with repeating. Archaic tales speak of flying vimanas. Vimanas were real automobiles and the origin of the ‘Aeroplanes Great wars were portrayed in early texts. Weapons could literally balance the land like a a gratifying force field. In ancient India, we found words for certain measures of length; one was the distance of light- years and one was the length of an atom. Only a a community that maintained nuclear power would have the necessity for such terms.
Consider these verses from the ancient Mahabharata:
a single projectile
Charged with all the power of the Universe. An incandescent column of smoke and flame
As bright as the thousand suns Rose in all its splendour…
a perpendicular explosion
with its billowing smoke clouds..
the cloud of smoke
rising after its first explosion
formed into expanding round circles
like the opening of giant parasols..
it was an unknown weapon,
An iron thunderbolt,
A gigantic messenger of death, Which reduced to ashes
The entire race of the Vrishnis and the
Andhakas.
The corpses were so burned
As to be unrecognisable.
The hair and nails fell out
Pottery broke without apparent cause,
And the birds turned white.
After a few hours
All foodstuffs were infected…
to escape from this fire
The soldiers threw themselves in streams
To wash themselves and their equipment.
Until the bombing of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, modern humanity could not infer any weapon as awful and devastating as those related in the archaic Indian texts. Yet, they very accurately depicted the consequences of an atomic outbreak. Radioactive poisoning will make hair and nails fall out. Inundating oneself in water gives some peace, though it is not a a treatment.
Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro
When recesses of Harappa and
Mohenjo-Daro achieved the street level, they found out skeletons dispersed about the cities, many clasping hands and sprawling in the streets as if some momentous, awful doom had taken spot. People were just lying, unburied, in the roads of the city. Recesses down to the street level disclosed 44 scattered skeletons, as if destruction had come so unexpectedly they could not fetch to their houses. All the structures were flattened to the soil. A father, mother and child were found flattened in the road, face down and still clasping hands. And these skeletons are thousands of years old, even by conventional archaeological norms. What could provoke such a thing? Why did the bodies not deteriorate or get consumed by wild animals? Likewise, there is no apparent cause of a physically forceful death.
These skeletons are among the most radioactive ever found, on par with those at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. At one location, Soviet intellects found a a structure which had a radioactive level 50 times tremendous than normal. Other municipalities have been found in northern India that show manifestations of eruptions of great extent. One such city, found between the Ganges and the peaks of Rajmahal seems to have been subjected to fierce heat. Huge abundances of walls and footings of the ancient city are combined together literally vitiñed. And since there is no clue of a volcanic eruption at Mohenjo-Daro or at the other ates the fierce heat to soften clay vessels can only be elucidated by an atomic blast or some other unfamiliar weapon. The cities were wiped off completely.
Radioactive ash in Rajasthan
There is proof that the Rama realm was ravaged by nuclear war. The Indus valley is now the Thar desert and the site of the radioactive ash found west of Jodhpur is around there. A heavy coating of radioactive ash in Rajasthan, India, encircles a three-square mile area, miles west of Jodhpur. Scientists are Exploring the location, where a lodging expansion was being built. For some time it has been inaugurated that there is a very elevated rate of birth flaws and cancer in the area under structure The levels of radiation there have enlisted so high on operatives calculates that the Indian govemment has now cordoned off the area. Scientists have excavated an ancient city where evidence shows an atomic gust dating back thousands of years, from 8,000-12,000 years, obliterated most of the buildings and likely a half-million people One researcher assesses that the nuclear bomb used was about the size of the ones dropped on Japan in 1945.
Giant Crater near Mumbai
Another inquisitive symbol of an ancient nuclear war in India is a giant crater near Mumbai. The nearly circular 2,154-metre- diameter Lonar crater, discovered 400 kilometres northeast of Mumbai and aged at less than 50,000 years old, could be related to nuclear combat of ancient times. No imprint of any meteoric textile, etc., has been found at the location or in the environs, and this is the world’s only known “Impact” crater in basalt. Clues of great shock (from a stress surpassing 600,000 atmospheres) and intense, abrupt heat (indicated by basalt glass spherules) can be ascertained from the site
Historian Comments on Ancient Nuclear War
Interestingly, Manhattan Project chief scientist Dr J. Robert Oppenheimer was known to be knowledgeable with ancient Sanskrit publications. In an interview completed after he supervised the first atomic test, he quoted from the Bhagavad Gita: “Now I am become Death, the Destroyer of Worlds.”
When asked in an interview at Rochester University seven years after the Alamogordo nuclear test whether that was the first atomic bomb ever to be detonated, his reply was, “Ancient cities whose brick and stonewalls have literally been vitrified, that is, fused together, can be found in India, Ireland, Scotland, France, Turkey and other places. There is no logical explanation for the vitrification of stone forts and cities, except from an atomic blast.”
Historian Kisari Mohan Ganguli says that Indian sacred writings are full of such descriptions, which sound like an atomic blast as experienced in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He says references mention fighting sky chariots and final weapons. An ancient battle is described in the Drona Parva, a section of the Mahabharata. “The passage tells of combat where explosions of final weapons decimate entire armies, causing crowds of warriors with steeds and elephants and weapons to be carried away as if they were dry leaves of trees,” says Ganguli.
“Instead of mushroom clouds, the writer
describes a perpendicular explosion with
its billowing smoke clouds as consecutive
openings of giant parasols. There are
comments about the contamination of
food and people’s hair falling out.”
“It’s so mind-boggling to imagine that some civilization had nuclear technology before we did. The radioactive ash adds credibility to the ancient Indian records that describe atomic warfare.”