ONLY SIX-WINGED HUMMINGBIRD FOUND IN THE NAZCA DESERT
Copyright 2015 © thesecretofthegods.com

The Six-Winged Hummingbird of the Nazca Desert


This is the only six-winged Nazca Hummingbird I have found in all of my research [Nat. Geographic – May 1975] I have been unable to find this again online. It is the only geoglyph to show an ultralight aircraft within the geoglyph. This is a special glyph for one of the Tajin “Hummingbird” Lords from Teotihuacan

In the Americas a trinity of Gods was worshipped from Teotihuacan. Itzama [many other names] was the Creator, or Sun God, and the Virgin Blood Moon Goddess Awilix [sometimes called the Great Snake Goddess, or the Spider Goddess], with their offspring as the third and Savior God called Kukulkan. He was best known as the “Feathered Serpent”, the night flying destroyer God. He was also known as Jacawitz, the Mountain God and later Quetzalcoatl by the much later Aztec civilization. This basic assemblage of triune Gods will be found throughout the Americas, with the addition of many lesser, or personal Gods.

One of the Teotihuacan Tajin [derived from “Twelve old men who were Lords”] names translate as “Hummingbird” and this branch of Gods is honored with hummingbird symbols in the Nazca Desert. The Pyramid El Tajin is an extremely unique structure located on the Gulf Coast north of San Lorenzo.

El Tajin Pyramid [Pyramid of the Niches] construction was completed in the 700s CE with six stepped platforms, sixty-five feet high and eighty-five feet square, with placed [poured] concrete roofs. Construction of El Tajin began about 500 CE with several stepped pyramids and ball courts.

The Pyramid of the Niches was constructed with 365 niches (possibly one for each day of the calendar year). Each niche measured about 24 inches square. The complex contains many ball courts and was the site of human sacrifice. 

The El Tajin complex was a major religious and trade hub for Teotihuacan with corn, vanilla, cocoa and tobacco as the primary trade items.

The El Tajin Complex was destroyed and burned about 1100 CE, coinciding with the same destruction of the Toltec capital city of Tollan when the last Lord died.

The reference to the Maya using concrete in 500 CE is not widely proclaimed, the same as their advanced metallurgy. The Greeks produced a cementitious material about 600 BCE, but the Romans successfully used concrete for structures in 200 BCE. This knowledge somehow made it to Central America by 500 CE. I suspect the use of cementitious materials, such as volcanic ash, occurred much earlier in the use of plaster.