Dulce Alien Base | [top]
Bennewitz contacted Kirtland Air Force Base. They sent men in dark sunglasses who nodded, took his data, and politely asked him to stop digging. He didn’t. What he found instead became the cornerstone of modern ufology: a labyrinth of tunnels, seven levels deep, carved into the rock and lined with a metal that seemed to drink the light.
One of the most dramatic chapters of the Dulce lore involves , an explosives engineer who claimed to have helped build the base. Schneider alleged that during an expansion in 1979, he and a team of Special Forces stumbled into a cavern filled with "Greys". The resulting "Dulce Firefight" purportedly left 66 soldiers dead and Schneider with lifelong scars from what he called an "alien beam weapon". Fact vs. Folklore Dulce Alien Base
A New Mexico State Police trooper who documented unexplained cattle mutilations in the 1970s, reporting sightings of silent, sophisticated spacecraft and strange medical anomalies. Bennewitz contacted Kirtland Air Force Base
Locals will tell you not to go near the Archuleta Mesa after dark. Not because of monsters, but because of the men in unmarked trucks who will stop you, shine a light in your eyes, and politely ask you to leave. They carry no badges, but they carry certainty. What he found instead became the cornerstone of
His investigation led him to a local Jicarilla Apache elder who told him a chilling story: "The mountain has been occupied for a long time. Before the Spanish, we knew not to go there. The people beneath the ground are not our ancestors. They are the outsiders who take the cattle and the people."
An Albuquerque businessman who believed he was intercepting alien electronic communications from Kirtland Air Force Base. His investigations led him to believe a joint human-alien base existed under Archuleta Mesa. Gabe Valdez