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Psychic Archeology

The use of clairvoyance was behind the discovery of the Edgar Chapel in the Abbey of Glastonbury. As Bligh Bond recounts in his book The Gate of Remembrance, there was no mention in any document of the exact location of this chapel, nor of its size. Over the course of several sessions of automatic writing, Bond obtained precise guidelines as to its location. The following year, 1908, work was begun, leading to the excavation of the chapel- most of the "channeled" instructions were exactly correct.

A number of archaeologists have used psychics in their digs, with considerable success. Dr. Norman Emerson of the Univ. of Toronto, for example, reported systematically being assisted by a businessman named George McMullen, who had a sharp talent for locating ruins and reconstructing their associated history. Following the path laid by such "psychic archaeologists", Stephan Schwartz, founder of the "Mobius Group", launched the Alexandria Project.

Its objective was to locate nothing less than the ruins of the famous Library of Alexandria, and the tomb of Alexander the Great, also presumed to be in Alexandria (which he had himself designed and founded). In the early phases of the project, eleven mediums in the U.S. were put to work on maps, and an analysis was made of all the places they found. Their "map dowsing" converged upon three sites. Accompanied by two of the psychics and a team for research and filming, Schwartz left for an onsite investigation in Egypt. The psychics were Hella Hammid, distinguished for her remote viewing at SRI, and George McMullen, who had earned quite a reputation working with archaeologist Emerson. Once onsite the psychics led the search like bloodhounds, practically overwhelming the team with all the information they were providing. 

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