John Rhodes after 3 years of field research reportedly discovered the Grand Canyon city, which is now being used as a museum for elitist groups and has lower levels that are being used by “ super secret black book operatives”, which can only be entered via a stainless steel door at the bottom of a stairwell deep within the “ city” that is “ guarded by a very lonely soldier staring into the darkness… dressed in a white jumpsuit and armed only with an M16 assault rifle to ward off his imagination.” The underground city is about 42 miles up river from El Tovar Crystal Canyon and Crystal Creek, and about 2000 feet above the river bed on the east wall. Jordan and associates also explored the man-made cavern with hundreds of rooms, enough to hold over 50 thousand people. One account of the narrative borrows the very familiar trope of involvement by the Smithsonian Institute in relation to the alleged discovery: ![]() The March 12 & Apissues of the Arizona Gazette purportedly carried a story about a similar underground discovery, this time an entire “ city”, which was found near the Grand Canyon. However, there are similar stories that surface from time to time in other parts of the United States as well. Whether the story above, related to me by a member of the North Carolina Center for the Advancement of Teaching, is based on fact, or merely legend, is a worthwhile question. ![]() As the story goes, the construction proceeded as planned at the time, and the chamber was sealed shortly after a small group of archaeologists was allowed to examine the remains, along with a number of items that also filled the ancient underground chamber. ![]() Many decades ago, when the construction of the library facilities at Western Carolina University near Cullowhee, North Carolina, had been underway, a local story tells of the discovery of an underground chamber, in which the bodies of what appeared to be a number of Native Americans were found.
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