12.3 C
London
Monday, May 4, 2026

Mysterious underground base tied to deadly UFO encounters may exist

Mysterious underground base tied to deadly UFO encounters may exist,

Rumors that a secret mountain base in the US controlled by aliens has been swirling for 50 years, but locals and UFO researchers are convinced it’s real.

The base allegedly sits inside Archuleta Mesa in New Mexico, but has gained the nickname ‘Alien Mountain’ because of the conspiracy theories, strange phenomena, and alleged eyewitness accounts all tied to the nearby town of Dulce.

While there’s no physical evidence that a base has somehow been carved out inside the large mountain, UFO researchers have continued to examine the claims surrounding the facility, including a battle with aliens that reportedly left 66 people dead.

Since the 1970s, residents have claimed they’ve seen UFOs, extraterrestrials, and even genetic experiments that look like human-alien hybrids walking around the town.

Geraldine Julian, a Dulce resident, told the Santa Fe New Mexican: ‘The whole town of Dulce, whoever you want to talk to, they’ll tell you what they’ve seen, a lot of them.’

The local community hasn’t just seen things in the sky, as they’ve taken photos of strange craft around the mountain, as well as unexplained cow mutilations in nearby fields.

Recently, declassified records have revealed how the US government could have created the massive complex inside Archuleta Mesa, using a machine that literally melts rock instead of drilling.

The records may one day help prove the stories of at least one alleged whistleblower, who claimed he survived that deadly encounter with the aliens hiding inside the government facility.

Archuleta Mesa (pictured) overlooks the town of Dulce, New Mexico, where UFO researchers and locals both claim aliens live in secret

Residents have photographed multiple UFOs over the years flying near Archuleta Mesa. A secret base is believed to be hidden inside the mountain, created using advanced drilling technology

UFO and government conspiracy researcher John Greenewald was able to uncover documents revealing that a machine called the Subterrene was built and tested in the 1970s.

The Subterrene is a nuclear-powered tunneling machine developed to bore through rock and soil by melting them with extreme heat, creating smooth, glass-lined tunnels.

It was created by scientists at Los Alamos National Laboratory, just 100 miles from the site of the alleged New Mexico base inside Archuleta Mesa.

Although the declassified documents confirmed that the Subterrene exists, there were no records of it being used to build Dulce Base.

If the mountain base does exist, however, one man already revealed what it looks like, claiming that Dulce Base has seven floors devoted to genetic experiments, extraterrestrial technology, mind control, and housing for alien beings.

The man who allegedly saw the inside of Dulce Base was Phil Schneider, a self-proclaimed former government engineer and geologist.

Before he died in 1996, Schneider repeatedly claimed that he suffered severe injuries, including the loss of several fingers, during a deadly battle with aliens inside the complex.

According to Schneider, who never showed proof of his government ties, 66 military personnel and government workers perished in the fight after a human team accidentally drilled into an alien-controlled section of the base.

Phil Schneider, an alleged government whistleblower and geologist, claimed that Dulce Base had 7 levels devoted to alien research, mind control, and genetic experiments

Schneider also made unsubstantiated claims that the US government was creating hundreds of these mountain bases around the nation using advanced technology.

At UFO lectures, Schneider would also reveal a piece of metal that he claimed was alien technology from the Dulce base, and that it was now being used in US stealth aircraft.

The rumors of a mysterious Dulce base go back to the mid-1970s, when New Mexico State Police officer Gabe Valdez was one of many locals who started finding the mangled remains of cattle near the mountain.

These cows hadn’t been killed by a local predator. They appeared to have been surgically disassembled, with specific organs removed and all the blood drained out.

In local radio interviews, Valdez also claimed that gas masks, glow sticks, and other equipment had been left behind at the scene of the attacks.

In 1979, Albuquerque businessman and physicist Paul Bennewitz claimed he intercepted unusual electronic signals near Dulce.

He would go on to theorize that the signals were coming from an underground base being used by both aliens and the US government, a theory that became widely shared among UFO researchers at the time.

However, Bennewitz’s claims were later dismissed by the UFO community after several researchers discovered declassified Air Force documents linking the businessman to a government disinformation campaign aimed at discrediting UFO stories.

Despite being seemingly debunked by the Air Force documents in the 1990s, locals in Dulce continue to maintain that the mountain is a true UFO hotspot.

New Mexico State Police officer Gabe Valdez (pictured) was one of the first people in the 1970s to note the strange events taking place near the mountain and discuss it publicly

Several cow mutilations were discovered by Valdez and others during the 1970s and 1980s, with suspicious equipment like gas masks left behind at the scene of the attacks

‘It’s not just a fairy tale,’ Julian said in 2016. ‘All the things are true, and I believe every last one of them, too, because I’ve seen it myself.’

Julian added in an interview with KOAT that she saw one of the genetic experiments allegedly created in Dulce Base, saying that it was a ‘goat with a tail’ from the waist down, but had the upper body and head of a human.

Other locals said they’ve seen the ground open up near the mountain, with steam coming out of the opening. 

Dory Vigil, a Dulce resident who captured a photo of a UFO near Archuleta Mesa, said he’d take a lie detector test to prove he and others in the community aren’t making up what continues to be seen in this small town of just 2,700 people.

New Mexico

Rumors that a secret mountain base in the US controlled by aliens has been swirling for 50 years, but locals and UFO researchers are convinced it’s real.

Hot this week

Diana’s ex-hairdresser condemns ‘evil’ comments about Kate’s hair

Princess Diana's former hairdresser has condemned 'nasty' comments made about the Princess of Wales 's hair - as she stepped out with her newly blonde tresses.

The unusual breakfast request Princess Lilibet asks Meghan Markle for

Meghan Markle revealed her children's favourite meals and that she 'doesn't like baking' on the second season of her lifestyle show With Love, Meghan.

Experts reveal how many tins of tuna is safe to eat a week

The NHS advises people to eat at least two portions of fish a week, yet a recent investigation revealed toxic metals, including mercury, could be lurking in cans of tinned tuna sold in the UK.

Some people DO see ghosts – and medics say there’s an explanation

An astonishing third of people in the UK and almost half of Americans say they believe in ghosts, spirits and other types of paranormal activity.

Prince Philip’s nickname only his nearest and dearest could call him

From 'Lillibet' to 'Grandpa Wales', members of the Royal Family are known to go by many nicknames.

The exercise routine done lying down to boost balance and agility

Hitting 10,000 steps a day is a fitness goal held by many. But a less time consuming alternative, performed lying down, could help improve balance, flexibility and agility in just two weeks.

I’m a sleep doctor, these weird bedtime techniques really work

We all know that getting eight hours of sleep a night has countless health benefits - but for many of us, it's easier said than done.

‘One-minute’ jab rolled out on NHS for thousands of cancer patients

Tens of thousands of cancer patients could benefit from a new jab on the NHS which 'rapidly' treats over a dozen cancers in just 60 seconds.

‘I have my own funeral planned down to the smallest detail’

From helping families have difficult conversations to sitting vigil in someone's final hours, their work is as much about living well as it is about dying well.

Ultimate women’s guide to testosterone: From side-effects to dementia

Advocates say that it can banish fatigue, revive libido and restore 'va-va-voom'. And testosterone therapy, championed by everyone from Davina McCall to Nadine Dorries , is having a moment.

Tourists swamp Italian villages with crowds ‘trapping locals in homes’

As temperatures rise, tourists have begun to infest the streets of the quaint villages that line the Amalfi Coast, knocking peeling shoulders against each other.

Businessman will ‘not pay a penny to the council’

Luke Perret, 31, has been told he has just nine months to knock down the property he spent three years building.

British drone swarm hunts ‘Russian targets’ in first war games

Britain has demonstrated its flagship drone swarming technology for the first time, simulating strikes on a Russian tank.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img