Archive for January 4, 2012

Aozituke Gumusitan with an expedition went into the remote Himalayan kingdom caves. With LED flashlight and other equipment, they began the trip and found a large number of ancient manuscripts. According to the Digital Himalaya Project at Cambridge University, these manuscripts may be deliberately hidden with the religious writings of the Tibetan tradition. In the adventure, they found a large number of 15th century Tibetan paintings and manuscripts. These artifacts can be the real source of inspiration for Shangri-La world together. In the 1930s much readers of the novel “Lost Horizon”, the British writer James Hilton has portrayed a fictional Shangri-La paradise.

Until recently, there are only a few persons detecting the steep cliff at the surface digging out these mysterious caves. The reason is that on the Musi Tan is a restricted area of ??Nepal. It has long been not open to outsiders. In 2007, a team of American researchers and experts in the Himalayas Dayton Coburn and veteran class mountaineer Pete led the research team, marching toward the rock falling off a cliff and detection of these artificial caves. With LED flashlight, they have found some surprising results.

On November 18, 2009 U.S. Public Broadcasting Service documentary premiere of two new “Lost Cave Temples of the Himalayas” and “Shangri-La’s secret”, the audience can see them in this line, and in 2008 staged a second expedition and found a series of tour treasures. Expedition found human remains in the caves.

In August 2008, Shangri-la of Nepal on the Musi Tan cave exploration, the expedition found some human remains. In 2007, Arthas and his colleagues found a Tibetan Buddhist temple, decorated with beautiful frescoes above, in which a group of Buddhist frescoes of the 55 mass compositions, depicting the Buddha’s life. In 2008 the second exploration, the expedition also found a number of human remains which can be traced back 600 years ago. With LED flashlights, they also have found a lot of other items. There are also a large number of valuable manuscripts, decorative objects as well as some small paintings.

Buddhist cave murals were found on the cliff as well. These were located in remote Musi Tan Buddhist cave paintings discovered in 2008. They are carved in Cali Ganda River watershed within the top of a steep cliff. University of Cambridge Digital Himalaya Project Mark Turing said Gumusitan kingdom called “end of the world”, here is full of vigor and vitality. The rich cultural heritage and religious beliefs also show a wide range of variety.

600 years ago human remains are found. Expedition in Nepal, a player holding a remote Musi Tan human skull found in the cave. In 2008, the expedition found dating back 600 years ago human remains. Region may be the remains in a grave, indicating that these caves were once used to bury the dead.