The text supposedly accompanying the 1966 map was: "The LUE Map which will perplex treasure hunters for years to come. Only two people have bee able to decipher it and they will never be able to carry away all of the incredible treasures that are revealed by the map. Others will seek, and few will find; and the trovers will be committed to eternal secrecy when they learn the cryptic and shibboleth horde of all hoards on the American continent. True sign experts will find the ultimate in challenges in this key to a natural Fort Knox. Redrawn exactly from the IAYAYAM Key."
In a 1969 issue of National Prospector's
Gazette von Mueller claimed that the original map was owned by a man who
lived in or near Phoenix and the map had been in his family for years
and seen by many people. Again in a 1969 issue of NPG it was reported
that a man near Farmington, New Mexico claimed to have the original and
again in 1969 another man from Rialto, California reportedly made the
same claim. In 1971 in Treasure of the Valley of Secrets it was
reported that Hardrock Hammond "had come into possession of" the LUE Map
and "several of us" were copying it before it was returned to the
owner.""
According to a guy named Boyd Jolley, who claimed he
got this information from von Mueller, LUE is from the first three
letters of three, apparently invisible, words on the map. Lloro (crying
or tears in Spanish), Urraca (a proper female name derived from a Latin
noun meaning magpie, or thief, in Spanish, also the name of a mesa in
northern New Mexico), and Enterrari (enterrari isn't a word, but
enterraria is a Spanish verb meaning inter, bury, or entomb). Some
hypothesize that this means 'Urraca cries because she is buried', but
this is dependent on the nuances of Spanish grammar.
Researchers
of the map have speculated that there is a monument or possibly the Rio
Grande Pyramid at or near the site. "No existing town or city has any
relationship to the LUE except by coincidence." "105 degrees 12.5
minute longitude parallel" which runs down the middle of Colorado and
New Mexico. Some have claimed there is a "grid plot" and some think
cache numbers 5, 7, 11, 15, and 23 are referenced on the map.
Medicine
wheels - According to von Mueller, possible connections can be found in
an article in the January 1977 National Geographic article titled
"Probing the Mystery of the Medicine Wheels.". Approximately 170
medicine wheels are known to exist and they are all in the northern US
and southern Canadian plains. The Vermillion Canyon site in Brown's
Park in northern Colorado is one of the most southernmost known sites.
Some of the sites have been in use for approximately 5000 years, while
others seem to have been built for a single event. They are considered
sacred to natives and it is unclear if they serve any purpose other than
use as a ceremonial and celestial instrument. The radiating lines can
be associated with soltice events, as well as pointing to the location
of the rise of select stars It seems highly unlikely that this is in
any way relevant to the LUE.
2 comments:
Dan, you may be aware of this but I did a 90 minute presentation last year on the LUE in Orem, UT. The entire presentation can be viewed on Youtube. You've done your homework but I think you don't give Karl enough credit and have overlooked some important pieces of information, notably alleged cache recoveries...particularly Karl's recovery at Black Lake, NM. This seems a relatively well known event among those that knew Karl, though in fairness most of them have since passed on.
Would love to chat more about the topic, let me know if you'd like to view the videos, would be happy to share the links with you. It had to be broken into two parts to post but it's very well researched.
LUE is not invisible...you just have to connect the lines.
http://www.treasurenet.com/forums/treasure-legends/594542-lue-map-2d-version.html
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