Aliens are not always UFOs in the sky, Japanese USO (Unidentified Submerged Object) legendary incident

When thinking of aliens, Japan may not be the first place that comes to mind. But Japan has a convincing and strange story of foreign visitors. It has a famous USO (Unidentified Submerged Object) and its mysterious passenger place. In addition, Japan is the hometown of the most unusual stones and pyramids we have seen (Is there any place in the world where there are no pyramids?)

In 1803, on the east coast of Hitachi Province, Japan, a strangely round USO was The fishermen dragged ashore. Three similar texts describe the round "Utsuro Bune" (hollow ship) and a female passenger found inside the ship.

This hollow ship is 6 meters wide and nearly 4 meters high, with metal plates and railings with glass windows. It is said to be like a big incense burner. A hatch opened, and a young woman who looked 18-20 years old came out. In Western circles, she is called the "white princess" and she holds a strange square box in her hand.

She spoke an unrecognizable language and wore cloth clothes that the villagers had never seen before. Inside the "boat", there are strange words and more unique materials, and they compare them to sheets or carpets. Although she is friendly, she can speak a strange language.

"These metal bands and hard glass windows have never been seen by fishermen. Scientists have also compared the text on this ship with , New Mexico, found on the hull during the Roswell and Lundlesham Forest incident. Similar alien symbols were compared."

Three-place alien event text comparison

This woman is about 4 feet 9 inches tall, with pale skin, and red hair and eyebrows. Her hair was artificially stretched with strands of white fur or delicate fabrics. However, the picture of her in the text shows a woman who does not match the description for some unknown reason.

The historian Yanagida Kunio believed that this woman might go to sea on a round boat, which was not unheard of at the time. This object never flew, just drifted in the water. Toen shōsetsu’s text indicates that she may be the daughter of a foreign king.Maybe she broke her marriage vow, and the contents of the box were her lover's decapitation.

Although the text pointed out her cruel situation, the villagers decided to put her back in the boat and push her back to the sea.

"People may seem cruel to do this, but this is her destiny."

This is a disturbing, fascinating and unexplainable story from beginning to end.

Moved the location further south and came to Japan Asuka Historical National Park , where there is an 800-ton overall granite carving, similar to the description of "Utsuro Bune" (hollow ship). It is called Masuda no iwafune ("Masuda's Rock Ship"). The boulder is 36 feet long, 26 feet wide, and more than 15 feet high. The lattice carving on the bottom is believed to indicate some unknown process of shaping the rock. There are two three-foot-square holes in the hard rock.

Masuda-no-Iwafune

Studies have shown that this building may have been built to commemorate the formation of Masuda lake, which was later drained. Other speculations are that the boulder is an ancient astronomical observatory or a royal tomb, although no body has yet been found.

8-hachiro took another photo of the same Masuda no iwafune

Takeharu Mikami, an ancient astronaut theorist, visited the site in 2017. They think that Masuda no iwafune ("Masuda's Rock Ship") may represent a sky ship in Japanese mythology. Is this structure used to represent UFOs or something else? No one knows for sure, but its appearance is undoubtedly otherworldly.

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