posted on Mar, 31 2011 @ 08:21 AM
I came across this video on youtube that really struck my attention.
I cannot for the life of me figure out how to embed the Youtube Video, so here is the link.
www.youtube.com...
DESCRIPTION:
On January 1. 2011 a couple of medical professionals on a trip to Peru, took the first early morning flight on a small Cesna aircraft to view the
famous Nazca Lines. This video was taken from the plane window during the viewing of the lines. The weather was absolutely perfect, as it usually is
in this part of the desert. From out of no where, the plane was overtaken by a large dark dense set of clouds. The passengers described fear as the
captain of the plane asked them to brace themselves against the immenent turbulance. The small craft was soon entirely engulfed by the clouds. The man
videoing the Nazca Lines kept the camera rolling as they passed through the clouds. Unknown to the tourist was the disk that passed
unsafely close to the plane. He did not notice it until they returned to their room later on in the morning and viewed the tape. He was so shocked at
what he had seen that he uploaded segments of the flight and shared them to be viewed by others. At this time the tourist is still in Peru for another
10 days and will not be available for questions until he comes back to the US.
Nazca Lines of Peru, Etched into the driest desert in the world, the mysterious lines and figures of Nazca in Southern Peru are invisible from the
ground. Thought to have been made by the Nazca people, who flourished between 200 BC and 700 AD, in fact, these huge drawings were not discovered
until the 1930s--and only then by commercial airline pilots who happened to over-fly them. Ever since, they have intrigued the world. Who built them,
and why?
The particular part of the desert that the Nazca Lines are found has kept the lines in tact for thousands of years because it NEVER rains and any kind
of wind is extremely rare. These lines have been associated with UFO's for many years because the lines can only be seen from very high altitudes.