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EVP GHOST VOICES
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October 7,
2005 with Jeff Rense Live from the haunted mining ghost town in the mountains of the high desert of New Mexico. |
Hovenweep Ruins
AD 1200
Utah/Colorado BorderPaleoindians walked across Hovenweep land some 11,000 years ago as they hunted mammoths and large bison. In about AD 400, the Puebloans farmers arrived in the valley. They were the ancestors of the modern Hopi and the modern Zuni of the Little Colorado River basin and Puebloans communities of the Rio Grande basin east of the San Juan. The desert lands filled with sage were once fertile fields where crops such as corn and squash grew.
According to Joe S. Sando, Pueblo Indian scholar from Jemez Pueblo, "The systematic raising of corn led to the shaping of Pueblo religion, with rituals and prayers for rain and other conditions favorable to crops. The need to know the proper time for planting, cultivating, and harvesting led to developments in astronomical observation. They studied the behavior of the sun, the moon, clouds, the wind, and the vernal equinox."
Nancy Coplin of Njcoplin@aol.com
Johnstown & GettysburgNancy Coplin stays in a home rented by Lorraine Saintz that is located below Little Round Top. The first ghost voice was captured in Nancy's kitchen and the rest in the house in Gettysburg.
Lorraine Saintz of SpiritEnergy2000@aol.com
Haunted Gettysburg Home
David Liles of DeridderGhostHuntersClub@hotmail.com
Gerrit Olivier of mwjaked@mweb.co.za
Mort Payne of mortpayne@yahoo.com
Alese Schwoyer of schwoya@amtrak.com
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