Daniel Estulin

Investigative reporter on secret societies, especially the Bilderberg Club.

Books By Daniel Estulin:

  • Secrets of Club Bilderberg
  • The True Story of the Bilderberg Group

Daniel Estulin is an investigative reporter. He has earned various awards and has been investigating the Bilderbergers for 14 years. The True Story of the Bilderberg Group (2005) was named foreign book of the year by The Kingston Eye Opener In Canada. He was one of only two journalists to report on the Bilderberg meeting at the Dorint Sofitel Seehotel in Rottach-Egern, Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on May 5โ€“8, 2005. In September 2006, Estulin released the controversial book “Secrets of Club Bilderberg”.…

Fossilized finger

Found in the mid 1980s by a landowner where road gravel was being quarried from the Cretaceous Walnut Formation of the Commanche Peak limestone. Cretaceous rock is a hundred-million years old. Scanning techniques enabled studying of the interior of the fossil which is the finger of someone who rapidly died in a catastrophic event. Humans were present during Cretaceous times.…

Iron pillar of Delhi

There two such 1,600-year-old iron pillar in Delhi. The objects show no signs of rust or decay despite the weather conditions (over 1500 monsoons). The fifth century pillar, weighing more than six tonnes are over 23 feet high and consist of a single piece of wrought iron with an iron content of 99.72 %. (It is the purest iron found in the ancient world). Their surface is smooth and only some instances of scars and weathering can be seen. But it should not be like this… Any equivalent mass of iron, exposed during 1,600 years or more, to the Indian weather would have been reduced to rust only. These two iron monuments appear to have been protected from rust by the application of a thin coating of manganese dioxide. It is one of many suggested theories. By the way was this chemical also used in any other part of the ancient world? Who were the skilled metallurgists who made the pillars?…

Mallia table

The Mallia Table was discovered in the Central Court of the Minoan Palace of Mallia on Crete. It is a large limestone disk 90 centimeters in diameter and 36 centimeters thick. Around its circumference are 33 cups of equal size. A 34th. cup is larger and is located in a sort of ear that extends beyond the normal circumference of the disk. The larger cup is oriented due south. The disk is set in the stone pavement of a small terrace that is slightly elevated above the level of the Central Court. This strange monolith, which dates circa 1,900-1,750 BC, has been a puzzle to scholars since its discovery in 1926 by French excavators. C.F. Herberger’s thesis is that the disk is a lunisolar clock. The 33 small cups provide a convenient and symmetrical division of the 99 lunation’s of the 8-year cycle. By moving markers, one could have a fairly accurate lunisolar clock. The 34th. cup, by virtue of its larger size, would announce the need for an intercalcated month. This sort of clock, even though arrived at empirically, represents a remarkable innovation for a period almost 4,000 years …