Ancient Cave Paintings Across Peru, Nepal & Australia: Hovering Ships
Truth Rating
The story describes three archaeological sites (Peru, Nepal, Australia) sharing identical UFO-themed cave art. Analysis confirms these locations and specific findings are fictional, likely originating from modern paranormal creepypasta.
The story describes three archaeological sites (Peru, Nepal, Australia) sharing identical UFO-themed cave art. Analysis confirms these locations and specific findings are fictional, likely originating from modern paranormal creepypasta.
🔥Hot Take:
- The 'Cuauhtemoc Negro' and 'Whispering Peaks Grotto' do not exist in the archaeological record; they are linguistic chimeras typical of internet urban legends.
- While ancient astronauts are a popular sci-fi trope, there is zero peer-reviewed evidence of 'hovering ships' in cave art across these three continents.
🔥Hot Take:
- •The 'Cuauhtemoc Negro' and 'Whispering Peaks Grotto' do not exist in the archaeological record; they are linguistic chimeras typical of internet urban legends.
- •While ancient astronauts are a popular sci-fi trope, there is zero peer-reviewed evidence of 'hovering ships' in cave art across these three continents.
Claim Breakdown:
📝 Fact Check: There is no record of a site called 'Cuauhtemoc Negro' in Peru; 'Cuauhtemoc' is a Nahuatl (Aztec/Mexican) name, not Quechua or Incan, making its placement in Peru geographically and linguistically impossible for a genuine site. No Japanese-led expedition in 1946 reported such findings.
Fact Check Date: January 14, 2026
IMPORTANT WARNING
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