
A Moffat, Colorado, rancher was riding the fence line of her newly acquired ranch. She was accompanied by the former caretaker, a teenager who had lived at the rundown spread for several months, when the lad saw the sun reflect off something bright on the ground. What they discovered was a three-pound “crystal skull” about six inches high and three inches wide.
The skull did not look entirely human. It had a maniacal grin and more closely resembled the popular impression of those big-eyed extraterrestrials. The rancher thought it looked to her like an “ant person” skull.
After the rancher brought the crystal cranium back to her home, people began to have bizarre accidents and experience “unexplained” phenomena around the object. A visitor took the skull outside to look at it in the sunlight and the spare tire in the bed of the nearby pick-up truck parked in the driveway exploded. When a local researcher came over to videotape the skull, his camera inexplicably stopped working.
A psychic reading revealed that “It is very old. It’s not man-made and not of this earth. You must be very careful with it. It can be very detrimental… You must be balanced, or you will be hurt.”
“I don’t think it’s evil, but so many things have happened, I believe it’s connected to power,” the rancher concurred. “I get the feeling it came to me to protect it. It’s very strange. Everyone who looks at it feels something different. Some people tell me it’s healed their souls. Other people hate it and won’t touch it.”
Excited word of the discovery of this “alien-looking” artifact literally circulated around the world. One “researcher” who sat with the skull for “eight days” claimed to have channeled an amazing amount of information that she attributed to the skull. Stories of Lemurian scouts and settlers and other skulls waiting to be found here were communicated to true believers having a New Age field day. Some people felt the skull was a projection of some spiritual entity into our world, which might explain why its form was so strange. Others felt the relic had a connection with the Inner Earth. Articles full of errors appeared in international publications.
Contrary to popular belief, the skull was not crafted by aliens or ancient civilizations. The skull was one of about one hundred created over the past several years by Brad Chadez, a glass blower at the Blake Street Glass Company in Denver, Colorado. The artist found out about the skull’s overblown reputation after family members read an article in the Rocky Mountain News. He immediately sought to clear up the mystery.
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