Niburu is one of the other planets in our solar system. We can't see it because it enters the solar system at the wrong angle and is behind the sun, and that's why it was only recently discovered. It is now known by scientists that Niburu is slowly entering our solar system and getting closer to Earth. The planet Niburu needs gold dust to stabilize its atmosphere and once every 3650 years they land on Earth and take the gold dust.
So most of the temples built since archaic times were made of gold, thinking that the gods wanted gold.
The Niburians used gold dust not only to protect their atmosphere but also for long life, even immortalization.
In fact, the tablets found in the Egyptian pyramids show that the pharaohs also fed on gold dust and ate atomized gold dust in order to become immortal.
Göbeklitepe, where the Niburuans landed, is the world's first and oldest temple, thought to have been built 12 thousand years ago in the Stone Age. In 1985-1986, in a place 15 kilometers away from Urfa, a farmer found a strange stone while plowing the soil. The farmer took the stone to the Şanlıurfa Archeology Museum. The museum could not make any sense of the stone, they thought it was meaningless and worthless. The farmer thought that he could not take back such a heavy stone and left it in the garden of the museum. In 1990, when German archaeologist Prof. Dr. Klaus Schmitt came here, the stone caught his attention and when he conducted carbon tests, he realized that the stone was 12,000 years old. Without wasting any time, he began an excavation that would last about 19 years.
He continued his excavations in Göbeklitepe uninterruptedly until he died of a heart attack. Göbeklitepe is very important in terms of its connection with the Anunnaki and beings from outer space.
It actually represents the existence of humanity and the first temple. It is thought to predate the Egyptian pyramids and even the famous Stone-Age in England by 6000 years.
Only a very small part of Göbeklitepe, 4 layers, has been discovered, and there are 20 more layers deep inside that remain undiscovered and unexplored. Of the 20 structures in the top layer, 6 have already been uncovered. 3-6 meter tall and T-shaped columns surrounded by walls. The T columns depict people without heads. There are also reliefs of hands, arms and animals. These T-shaped figures are thought to represent the first sign of the cross, the first place where the symbol of the cross was first used. Since the head represents spirituality and was kept as a sacred relic, they were made without a head.
The statues all represent the gods and also the 12 zodiacs and constellations in the sky.
In the Sumerian drawings, 50 astronauts are seen with glasses and a number of technological devices. At the time, people were horrified by these images and called them "anunnaki", meaning 50 descending from the sky. Göbeklitepe is known as the place where the anunnaki descended to earth. They frightened the Anatolian people of that period with their strange appearance and introduced themselves as gods. People built this temple in dedication to these alien beings at that time. These columns weighing 40-60 tons seem impossible to have been built at the end of the ice age when the wheel and the lever had not yet been invented, when engineering knowledge and mathematics did not exist, when animals were not domesticated. How did primitive man carry them? How did he erect them?
A very high knowledge of astrology was also required, because every temple was built according to a celestial position.
The primitive people of Göbeklitepe covered the temple to hide. Then they built temple after temple, each time as the planet Nibulu came closer to the earth. The first temple was built on a flat area, but as it rose floor after floor, it became a hill. The top temple dates back 12,000 years, but the bottom one goes back as far as 55,000 years. That's why it was discovered so late and still remains a mystery.
Who knows how much time is left until Niburu, which approaches the earth once every 3650 years in Earth time, visits Göbeklitepe and what the consequences will be, how it will affect the southeast of Turkey, the north of Iraq, Iran and Syria?
Göbeklitepe still remains a mystery...
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