Chereads / The Final Exploration / Chapter 5 - Chapter 4

Chapter 5 - Chapter 4

"Many people will think I am talking nonsense at this point."

Indeed, this is truly an unbelievable thing. We received a very practical education and lived in an era that espoused materialism. Many unexplainable things were forcibly explained away with flimsy excuses. Therefore, I have never experienced this kind of thing before and my first reaction was that it was nonsense and baseless.

However, upon further reflection, this is not difficult to explain. In fact, if something has already become a fact, there must be a way for it to become a fact.

Inserting a sentence here, the film "Code Zero" ends here because I was shocked at the time, so I didn't feel anything abrupt about the ending. Later, I found out that there is a lot of content on the back of this zero tape, of course, when I learned about these things, these hidden contents had already lost their meaning. I didn't understand the reason why these contents were hidden when I first learned about it. It wasn't until I led the team later that I realized what those leaders were thinking. Maturity always requires a price, thinking about this lifetime, every time I matured almost without exception accompanied by sacrifice and lies, it is really helpless.

Later, the colonel and us had some interactive discussions. Many people thought it might be coincidence, and there may be concretions of pyrite or pure iron formed during the geological disaster period, coincidentally in this shape. But the colonel told us that based on careful analysis of the shape, it should be a Japanese "Shinzan", which is a very rare heavy bomber. The Japanese generally used it as a transport plane, and it was put into use in the late period of World War II with few quantities. Therefore, the possibility of coincidence is very low.

Since it's not a coincidence, the first thing to do is to make deductions based on the facts. The colonel explained to us the conclusions reached after the exploration team and many experts' suggestions. At that time, those people made this deduction:

First of all, the proposition is that they did indeed discover a Japanese bomber buried deep underground at a depth of 1,200 meters. They do not deny the possibility of the existence of this thing, but instead consider how it was brought down.

"There is only one explanation for this kind of thing, according to materialism, if the plane did not appear there by twisting through a nonsense space, then it must have been moved down by the Japanese themselves."

Similarly, to reach there, there must be a pathway, and it is obviously impossible to move the entire plane down, so the plane must be disassembled in order to be transported.

"So things can be assumed very clearly."

The Japanese back then, using an unknown method, dug or found a passage leading deep underground. Then, they dismantled a "Shinzan" into pieces and brought it down. At the end of the passage, 1,200 meters below ground, they reassembled the "Shinzan".

"This seemingly extreme and outrageous inference is the only reasonable possibility they can think of."

To prove this hypothesis, there are two prerequisites: first, to find the passage leading to the underground, and second, to find traces of a large quantity of equipment that was placed here.

"The colonel said that they found a large amount of antifreeze oil traces nearby, which should be considered as evidence of the second point. The engineering unit here is now conducting a wide search, hoping to find the first premise. Once the passage is found, people will be organized to go down and see what the situation is."

"This is the reason why we came here."

"The meeting ended here and the Colonel repeated the confidentiality regulations. Then, he let us free to do whatever we wanted. As soon as he left, the whole tent exploded with excitement and almost turned into chaos. To be honest, we are not afraid of exploring caves. We all have experiences and no one was afraid. We were excited because during the dull explorations, this kind of thing was undoubtedly attractive."

Later, after returning to our tents, everyone was too excited to sleep. Although we were all quite tired, we still crawled around in our tents, venting our emotions. That night, in my memory, only Old Cat was sleeping, while almost everyone else stayed up all night, immersed in excitement.

However, what seems strange to me now is that during all those discussions, not a single person raised the question: why did the Japanese go to such great lengths to bury a plane underground many decades ago?

"The exploration records here are locked in a password-protected iron box, indicating that they are highly confidential. It can be inferred that even the transportation personnel are not qualified to view the secrets. From the industry perspective, they obviously started with normal geological exploration here. During the exploration, they undoubtedly discovered something, and then did something unimaginable."

"Why? I guess everyone had this question in their minds at that time, but they all knew that bringing up this issue for discussion would be meaningless. Therefore, everyone chose selective blindness."