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The first section of this page was written by
Phil
Schneider:

Photo of United States Air Force tunnel boring machine at Little Skull Mountain,
Nevada, USA, December 1982. There are many rumors of secret military tunnels in
the United States. If the rumors are true, machines such as the one shown here
are used to make the tunnels.
(Source: U.S. Department of Energy.)

This is a $13 million tunnel boring machine (TBM) used for tunneling at the
Nevada Test Site. (Remember that Area 51 is part of the test site.) Many other
types of TBMs are used by many government agencies, including the 'nuclear
powered TBM' [NTBM] that melts solid rock and leaves behind glass-like walls.
Most tunneling activity is under military installations and all information is
highly restricted. Former employees of said facilities have surfaced over the
years to talk of massive underground installations in places like Area 51, the
Northrop facility in Antelope Valley, California (rumored to have 42 levels),
and the Lockheed installation near Edwards, California.
The 'Black Budget' currently consumes $1.25 trillion per year. At least this
amount is used in black programs, like those concerned with deep underground
military bases. Presently, there are 129 deep underground military bases in the
United States. They have been building these 129 bases day and night,
unceasingly, since the early 1940's. Some of them were built even earlier than
that. These bases are basically large cities underground connected by high-speed
magneto-leviton trains that have speeds up to Mach 2. Several books have been
written about this activity.
The average depth of these bases is over a mile, and they again are basically
whole cities underground. They all are between 2.66 and 4.25 cubic miles in
size. They have laser-drilling machines that can drill a tunnel seven miles long
in one day. I was involved in building an addition to the deep underground
military base at Dulce, which is probably the deepest base. It goes down seven
levels and over 2.5 miles deep. I helped hollow out more than 13 deep
underground military bases in the United States.
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More thought-provoking images of tunnel boring equipment:






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From Dr Bill Deagle's
December 2006 Granada Forum Lecture:
I took care of John Fialla, who was best friends with Phil Schneider. How many
people know about Phil Schneider? Well, they were using tunneling machines back
in the mid-90s that could tunnel through a rock face at seven miles per day,
that could cut through a rock face with high-energy impact lasers that could
blow the nano-sized particles of rock so that there was no debris left, forming
an obsidian-like core, and laying an inner core for unidirectional maglev trains
that travel at Mach 2 to 2.8 underground between these very very powerful and
organized cities.
There's 132 under the United States, an average of 5.36 to 7.24 cubic miles in
size at an average of 1.5 to 4.5 miles underground, built, by and large, most of
them in areas away from geotectonic areas - but there's going to be lots of new
geotectonic faults established when you have force 11, 12, 13, 14 earthquakes
hit the Earth.
Why are they rushing to do this? Because they know that catastrophe is coming.
And where's this money coming from? It's not coming from our regular Black Op
budget. It's coming from the illegal sale of drugs. In the United States there's
at least, by conservative estimates, a quarter of a trillion to a half a
trillion of illegal drugs just sold in the United States that goes directly into
underground budgets, and 90-95% goes to the DUMBs [Deep Underground Military
Bases].
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The following was written by Richard Sauder, PhD,
adapted from his book
Underground Bases and Tunnels:
The nuclear subterrene (rhymes with 'submarine') was designed at the Los Alamos
National Laboratory, in New Mexico. A number of patents were filed by scientists
at Los Alamos, a few federal technical documents were written - and then the
whole thing just sort of faded away.
Or did it?
Nuclear subterrenes work by melting their way through the rock and soil,
actually vitrifying it as they go, and leaving a neat, solidly glass-lined
tunnel behind them.
The heat is supplied by a compact nuclear reactor that circulates liquid lithium
from the reactor core to the tunnel face, where it melts the rock. In the
process of melting the rock the lithium loses some of its heat. It is then
circulated back along the exterior of the tunneling machine to help cool the
vitrified rock as the tunneling machine forces its way forward. The cooled
lithium then circulates back to the reactor where the whole cycle starts over.
In this way the nuclear subterrene slices through the rock like a nuclear
powered, 2,000 degree Fahrenheit (1,100 Celsius) earthworm, boring its way deep
underground.
The United States Atomic Energy Commission and the United States Energy Research
and Development Administration took out Patents in the 1970s for nuclear
subterrenes. The first patent, in 1972 went to the U.S. Atomic Energy
Commission.
The nuclear subterrene has an advantage over mechanical TBMs in that it produces
no muck that must be disposed of by conveyors, trains, trucks, etc. This greatly
simplifies tunneling. If nuclear subterrenes actually exist (and I do not know
if they do) their presence, and the tunnels they make, could be very hard to
detect, for the simple reason that there would not be the tell-tale muck piles
or tailings dumps that are associated with the conventional tunneling
activities.
The 1972 patent makes this clear. It states:
"... (D)ebris may be disposed of as melted rock both as a lining for the hole
and as a dispersal in cracks produced in the surrounding rock. The rock-melting
drill is of a shape and is propelled under sufficient pressure to produce and
extend cracks in solid rock radially around the bore by means of hydrostatic
pressure developed in the molten rock ahead of the advancing rock drill
penetrator. All melt not used in glass-lining the bore is forced into the cracks
where it freezes and remains ...
"... Such a (vitreous) lining eliminates, in most cases, the expensive and
cumbersome problem of debris elimination and at the same time achieves the
advantage of a casing type of bore hole liner."
(U.S.
Patent No. 3,693,731 dated Sept. 26, 1972)
There you have it: a tunneling machine that creates no muck, and leaves a
smooth, vitreous (glassy) tunnel lining behind.
Another patent three years later was for:
A tunneling machine for producing large tunnels in soft rock or wet, clayey,
unconsolidated or bouldery earth by simultaneously detaching the tunnel core by
thermal melting a boundary kerf into the tunnel face and forming a supporting
excavation wall liner by deflecting the molten materials against the excavation
walls to provide, when solidified, a continuous wall supporting liner, and
detaching the tunnel face circumscribed by the kerf with powered mechanical
earth detachment means and in which the heat required for melting the kerf and
liner material is provided by a compact nuclear reactor.
This 1975 patent further specifies that the machine is intended to excavate
tunnels up to 12 meters in diameter or more. This means tunnels of 40 ft. or
more in diameter. The kerf is the outside boundary of the tunnel wall that a
boring machine gouges out as it bores through the ground or rock. So, in
ordinary English, this machine will melt a circular boundary into the tunnel
face. The melted rock will be forced to the outside of the tunnel by the tunnel
machine, where it will form a hard, glassy tunnel lining (see the appropriate
detail in the patent itself, as shown in Illustration 41). At the same time,
mechanical tunnel boring equipment will grind up the rock and soil detached by
the melted kerf and pass it to the rear of the machine for disposal by conveyor,
slurry pipeline, etc.
And yet a third patent was issued to the United States Energy Research and
Development Administration just 21 days later, on 27 May 1975 for a machine
remarkably similar to the machine patented on 6 May 1975. The abstract
describes:
A tunneling machine for producing large tunnels in rock by progressive
detachment of the tunnel core by thermal melting a boundary kerf into the tunnel
face and simultaneously forming an initial tunnel wall support by deflecting the
molten materials against the tunnel walls to provide, when solidified, a
continuous liner; and fragmenting the tunnel core circumscribed by the kerf by
thermal stress fracturing and in which the heat required for such operations is
supplied by a compact nuclear reactor.
This machine would also be capable of making a glass-lined tunnel of 40 ft. in
diameter or more.
Perhaps some of my readers have heard the same rumors that I have heard swirling
in the UFO literature and on the UFO grapevine: stories of deep, secret,
glass-walled tunnels excavated by laser powered tunneling machines. I do not
know if these stories are true. If they are, however, it may be that the
glass-walled tunnels are made by the nuclear subterrenes described in these
patents. The careful reader will note that all of these patents were obtained by
agencies of the United States government. Further, all but one of the inventors
are from Los Alamos, New Mexico. Of course, Los Alamos National Lab is itself
the subject of considerable rumors about underground tunnels and chambers,
Little Greys or "EBEs", and various other covert goings-on.
A 1973 Los Alamos study entitled
Systems and
Cost Analysis for a Nuclear Subterrene Tunneling Machine: A Preliminary Study,
concluded that nuclear subterrene tunneling machines (NSTMs) would be very cost
effective, compared to conventional TBMs.
It stated:
Tunneling costs for NSTMs are very close to those for TBMs, if operating
conditions for TBMs are favorable. However, for variable formations and
unfavorable conditions such as soft, wet, bouldery ground or very hard rock, the
NSTMs are far more effective. Estimates of cost and percentage use of NSTMs to
satisfy U.S. transportation tunnel demands indicate a potential cost savings of
850 million dollars (1969 dollars) throughout 1990. An estimated NSTM prototype
demonstration cost of $100 million over an eight-year period results in a
favorable benefit-to-cost ratio of 8.5.
...Was the 1973 feasibility study only idle speculation, and is the
astonishingly similar patent two years later only a wild coincidence? As many a
frustrated inventor will tell you, the U.S. Patent Office only issues the
paperwork when it's satisfied that the thing in question actually works!
In 1975 the National Science Foundation commissioned another cost
analysis of the nuclear subterrene. The A.A. Mathews Construction and
Engineering Company of Rockville, Maryland produced a comprehensive report
with two, separate, lengthy appendices, one 235 and the other 328 pages.
A.A. Mathews calculated costs for constructing three different sized tunnels in
the Southern California area in 1974. The three tunnel diameters were:
a) 3.05 meters (10 ft.)
b) 4.73 meters (15.5 ft.)
c) 6.25 meters (20.5 ft.)
Comparing the cost of using NSTMs to the cost of mechanical TBMs, A.A. Mathews
determined:
Savings of 12 percent for the 4.73 meter (15.5 ft.) tunnel and 6 percent for the
6.25 meter (20.5 foot) tunnel were found to be possible using the NSTM as
compared to current methods. A penalty of 30 percent was found for the 3.05
meter (10 foot) tunnel using the NSTM. The cost advantage for the NSTM results
from the combination of,
(a) a capital rather than labor intensive system,
(b) formation of both initial support and final lining in conjunction with the
excavation process.
This report has a number of interesting features. It is noteworthy in the first
place that the government commissioned such a lengthy and detailed analysis of
the cost of operating a nuclear subterrenes. Just as intriguing is the fact that
the study found that the tunnels in the 15 ft. to 20 ft. diameter range can be
more economically excavated by NSTMs than by conventional TBMs.
Finally, the southern California location that was chosen for tunneling cost
analysis is thought provoking. This is precisely one of the regions of the West
where there is rumored to be a secret tunnel system. Did the A.A. Mathews study
represent part of the planning for an actual covert tunneling project that was
subsequently carried out, when it was determined that it was more cost effective
to use NSTMs than mechanical TBMs?
Whether or not nuclear subterrene tunneling machines have been used, or are
being used, for subterranean tunneling is a question I cannot presently answer.
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