Trans Caribbean Times
Newsletter Yearly Archives 2013
2013
Mar
04
Vol. 13 Issue 2 | Mexico’s 40 Ton Megalithic Stone Heads


Discovered deep in the jungle of southern Mexico are dozens of huge 40 ton stone heads which have remained hidden for almost 3,000 years. Radio carbon dated to almost 900 years before Christ, these mysterious megalithic heads easily predate Christopher Columbus by more than 2,000 years and long predate the ancient Maya and Aztec civilizations as well.

Each head was meticulously carved out of a single basalt boulder (an extremely hard fine grained volcanic rock second in hardness only to diamonds), without the use of modern diamond edged cutting tools. As if this were not enough, defying gravity and the laws of nature, the heads were then somehow lifted and carried without damage, more than 120 kilometers up and over formidable mountains, across raging rivers, through tropical jungles with quick sand swamps, all without the benefit of any roads, bridges or vehicles with which to move them.

Some have posited that the stone heads with strange helmets covering their ears depict mystical leaders or gods. Others have hypothesized that the clear prevalence of African and oriental facial features may represent a fusion of African and Pre Columbian indigenous peoples. However, paleoanthropologists agree that such a fusion 3,000 years ago was impossible.

The how, the why, and by what or by whom the heads were created and transported are questions which are beyond the scope of modern technology. They are questions for which we simply have no answers, and represent yet another mystery in the continuing saga of the Yucatan Peninsula’s ancient history.

If you would like to be a part of this saga and would like an opportunity to own an unspoiled pristine part of Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula, contact us at oceanfront@transcaribbeantrust.com.



2013
Mar
04
Vol. 13 Issue 1 | Mexico’s Crystal Skulls


We’re all familiar with Indiana Jones movies as well as the 2008 blockbuster “Kingdom of The Crystal Skulls”.

If you’re looking for a good mystery to wrap your mind around, look no further than Mexico’s Crystal Skulls. In the past crystal skulls have been discovered at ruin sites across Mexico. But now a new crystal skull has been discovered in an ancient ruin in Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula. The lore surrounding the crystal skulls is one worth studying, especially if you start with the famous Mitchell-Hedges skull.

The Mitchell-Hedges skull is the most mysterious for at least 2 reasons; first, it is very similar in form to an actual human skull, even featuring a fitted removable jawbone. Second, it is impossible to say how the Mitchell-Hedges skull was constructed. From a technical standpoint, it appears to be an impossible object which today’s most talented sculptors and engineers would be unable to duplicate.

The unknown artist also used no metal tools. Investigators have been unable to find signs of any tell-tale scratch marks on the crystal, under high-powered microscopic analysis. Indeed, most metals would have been ineffectual, for the crystal has a specific gravity of 2.65, and a “Mohs Scale” hardness factor of 7.

The enigma of the skull, however, does not end with only how it was made. The zygomatic arches (the bone arch extending along the sides and front of the cranium) are accurately separated from the skull piece, and act as light pipes, using principles similar to modern optics, to channel light from the base of the skull to the eye sockets.


The eye sockets in turn are miniature concave lenses that also transfer light from a source below, into the upper cranium. Finally, in the interior of the skull is a ribbon prism and tiny light tunnels, by which objects held beneath the skull are magnified and brightened.

Observers have reported that, for unknown reasons, the skull will change color. Sometimes the frontal cranium clouds up, looking like white cotton, while at other times it turns perfectly clear, as if the space within disappears into an empty void. Over a period from 5 to 6 minutes, a dark spot often begins forming on the right side and slowly blackens the entire skull, then recedes and disappears as mysteriously as it came.

When looking at the sum total of skill and knowledge incorporated in the Mitchell-Hedges skull, modern science is stumped as to how to explain it. Author Garvin summarized the findings in these words: ‘It is virtually impossible today — in the time when men have climbed mountains on the moon — to duplicate this achievement”.

Further examples of primitively sculpted skulls are a couple called the Mayan Crystal Skull and the Amethyst Skull. They were discovered in the early 1900s in Guatemala and Mexico, respectively, and were said to be brought to the U.S. by a Mayan priest. The Amethyst Skull is made of purple quartz and the Mayan skull is clear, but the two are otherwise very alike. Like the Mitchell-Hedges skull, both of them were studied at Hewlett-Packard Laboratories, and they too were found to be inexplicably cut against the axis of the crystal.

Regardless of any unearthly properties, the questions remain: where did they come from, how are they made, who made them and why? There are countless hypotheses that they are the legacy of some higher intelligence. Many believe they were created by extraterrestrials or beings in Atlantis or Lemuria.

The most obvious answer to the mystery is that native artisans crafted the skulls themselves. The Mayans are most often associated with them, although most scientists doubt that they could have made the skulls, simply because of the technical conundrum the job poses. To all who have studied them, the crystal skulls truly, as is often said, “Remain a mystery surrounded by a riddle and wrapped in an enigma”.

If you or your family would be interested in owning a spectacular beach front property in the land of the Maya (Kingdom of The Crystal Skulls), Trans Caribbean has some new listings for 2013 where you, like Indiana Jones, can try your luck and discover your own Crystal Skull.



2011
Dec
13
Vol. 11 Issue 12 | Christmas in the Mexican Caribbean

santa on caribbean beach

Some Mexican children will get a visit from St. Nick this year, but many have another special Christmas spirit who brings gifts and joy. On Christmas Eve, kids can expect a visit from "el Ni-o Dios". The Holy Child brings gifts to the good girls and boys. Then on January 6, the three wisemen come to visit for "Reyes Magos". The Magi leave more gifts for the children, sometimes in their shoes!

Many Mexican families attend a midnight mass on Christmas Eve. The Birth of Christ is very much the central theme to the Mexican celebration, and this is a grand change from the commercialized American Christmas. The Christmas trees have to travel a good way, and that drives up the price. Usually, full sized trees are only found in the homes of the wealthy, but many others find a way to honor the evergreen by adding ornaments to a small branch or shrub.

To decorate for a Mexican Christmas, be sure to add some of the beautiful red poinsettias or "La Flor De Noche Buena". They have been a Christmas tradition throughout much of the world since an American ambassador introduced it to South Carolina in the 1820′s. A well-dressed Mexican Christmas home would also have to have a Pinata (paper-mache figure filled with candy)! As part of the fun, the children gather around and smack it with sticks until they are showered by the candy explosion!

The Mexican Christmas festival is an impressive sight, with elaborate decorations and celebrations for nearly a month! The holiday is overwhelming in its magnitude, but amazingly, in all this revelry the people rarely lose sight of the true meaning of Christmas! Let us know if you are planning a holiday trip and we will be happy to meet with you to discuss some of the best Caribbean beachfront listings that we have available to suit all needs and budgets. With financing now available the time has never been better to treat yourself to a Caribbean future.