The edmonton plaque
The mystery of the stones engraved by the "Gods", or at least by their descendants, still remains unsolved today. The complex Maya glyphs surrounding the tombstone of Palenque are only partially deciphered. The symbolism found on the stones of Ica, which, leaving aside their absolute truthfulness, seem to lead us back to a remote past in which the earth was perhaps visited by travelers from other planets.
It seems much simpler to deny this possible interpretation by attributing it to a rather original fantasy, but denying its hypothetical validity does not allow us to reveal the mystery.
Repeatedly, in the documented chronicles of these civilizations, occur repeatedly stories of written or drawn communications, left in the mists of time by someone who tried to provide men with scientific evidence of their future. These "heritages", however, do not only belong to those distant eras...
Leonardo Romano, an Italian living in Edmonton in Canada, on 4 November 1967 made a mysterious observation: from the window of his house he saw a luminous globe land on the field in front, next to a portion of conspicuously burnt grassy ground. He found a small sheet of metal, only one millimeter thick and approximately 17 cm long. The plate, somewhat disconcertingly, was delicately covered with a series of letters foreign to any known Earth alphabet.
This find, if it had been found in a remote era, would certainly have been considered a gift from the gods and copied countless times, like the stones of Ica. Unfortunately, both the Ica stones and many other archaeological finds are part of a long series of clues ignored by official science.
However, it should be remembered that apparitions of luminous globes and burnt circles are today a topic of great discussion among ufologists, as regards the phenomenon of "crop circles", the phenomenon observed by Roman Leonardo is so unusual: other plaques have already been found buried in the wheat fields where complex geometries and designs had been drawn, such as the Edmonton plaque, which also have writings and symbols unknown to man.