Where did the airfield come from in Africa? Mysterious Yundum is an airfield for vimanas. Fascists, aliens or ancient earthlings

Recently, the media have reported many times about the mysterious Yundum airfield, which is located in small country Gambia, located on the African continent. Why did the airfield receive the status of “mysterious”?

But because its main and very expensive component, the runway (runway), was not built by anyone, because it existed before the airfield appeared here. The runway consists of monolithic stone slabs that are neatly fitted to each other.

According to local residents, this “road” of monolithic stones has been in this place since ancient times. When they decided to build an airfield here, they realized that better place can not found. The builders rolled asphalt onto the slabs and applied all the necessary markings, resulting in a magnificent runway 3,600 meters long. Any modern aircraft of any size and weight can land at the airfield.

It is interesting that the Yundum airfield was created with the active participation of the American space agency, which chose it as an alternate airfield, which is necessary for landing reusable spacecraft called Shuttles. NASA representatives helped install the necessary electronic control and navigation systems.

The building was opened in 1996 international airport, the project of which was developed jointly by the Americans and Gambians. It is interesting that not all the stone slabs of the runway were covered with asphalt - some were left uncovered at the beginning and end. It turned out that the modern strip was smaller than the ancient one.

The question remains unanswered: what kind of equipment took off from this runway? This question is quite complicated. Available publications indicate that no studies have been conducted here. In areas not covered with asphalt, light slabs with a sandy-brown color are visible, carefully fitted to each other.

No one knows the exact age of the stone slabs either. Some publications talk about the roughly polished surface of ancient slabs, while others talk about perfectly executed polishing. Published photographs indicate that the rough grinding of the slabs is closer to reality, however, this can only indicate their antiquity. After all, even perfectly polished stones can be severely damaged over time by precipitation and winds.

Recently, there has been a lot of talk about the mysterious Yundum airfield, discovered in the small African country of Gambia.

This airfield is almost a legacy of ancient civilizations, which, according to some information, had aircrafts- the so-called vimanas.

In any case, no one knows for sure who and when Yundum was built.

In this photo, the red circles mark the unpaved areas of the ancient runway slabs.

This former British colony is located on the Atlantic coast of tropical Africa and belongs to the group of the most economically backward countries not only in the world as a whole, but also in its far from prosperous continent. The territory of the state is strongly elongated in the latitudinal direction.

The Gambia extends 350 kilometers deep into the mainland from west to east; it is located along the bed of the deep river of the same name. The width of the country from north to south does not exceed 50 kilometers. Just over one and a half million people live in The Gambia, including 75% in rural areas.

Industry there is extremely poorly developed and consists of enterprises producing peanut butter, beer, soft drinks and clothing. Peanut exports provide the country with half of its foreign exchange earnings.

The backwardness of The Gambia is eloquently evidenced by the fact that until recently the population could receive higher education only abroad: in Senegal, USA or Western Europe. The situation changed only in 1999, when the University of the Gambia was established in the capital Banjul. There is only one library in the country and the first museum opened not so long ago; now, however, there are already five of them.

Here, the transition at the end of the last century from manual cultivation of fields with hoes to plows drawn by oxen, horses or donkeys is considered an achievement. Equipping fishing boats with outboard motors also became evidence of Gambia's involvement in technological progress.

Of course, this small country has its own strengths. It is one of the few on the Dark Continent where a multi-party system operates. politic system. There are several in the vicinity of Banjul magnificent resorts with spacious and clean sea ​​beaches, where tourists from the UK love to relax. Livestock farming can be considered very developed: the number of cattle exceeds 400 thousand heads.

Paved, marked and flew

But Gambia has a real international airport. Also mysterious. This is Yundum - the same one so beloved by ufologists and alternative historians. It is located 27 kilometers from Banjul.

The length of its runway (runway), which meets the highest requirements, is 3600 meters, so Yundum is able to accommodate aircraft of any weight. The Gambians themselves did not build this expensive runway. They just laid the asphalt on the existing rough-polished stone slabs that had been cleared of soil and made markings.

The Gambia was then helped by NASA, since the American space agency was interested in creating an alternate airfield for reusable spacecraft such as the shuttle. Initially, the United States chose the airport of the Senegalese capital Dakar, but its runway has too large an angle relative to the main flight path of the shuttles.

Therefore, in September 1987, the Americans reached an agreement with the Gambian side on the use of the Yundum airfield for these purposes. The runway has been improved. In particular, its width was increased from 29 to 45 meters. The Americans also installed the necessary electronic control and navigation systems. And in 1996, the international airport building, built according to a joint Anglo-Gambian project, was put into operation.

If you look closely at satellite images, you can see that the central part of the Yundum runway is actively used, but there are unused areas on both sides of the runway. They are paved with light slabs of an unusual sandy-brown color. There are also extensions of the strip that have not yet been cleared of land. And the trees along it grow in a very interesting way - along the lines of some faults in the soil.


Versions, versions, versions

So where did this runway come from? The most sensational, of course, is the hypothesis that the runway was built back in the days of pre-civilization, and that, very possibly, ancient Indian or Atlantean aircraft - vimanas - took off from here. However, fans of conspiracy theories made another assumption. They say the airfield was secretly built by the Germans during World War II.

Sometimes a more precise date is given - 1944. At first glance, this version is not without some plausibility. Indeed, during the war, the Nazis showed great interest in African uranium and allegedly even took it out of the Congo by plane, making several intermediate landings.

In this regard, one can even recall the secret German airfields built in the Arctic, behind the lines of Soviet troops. But as far as Gambia is concerned, there are several big “buts”. Firstly, such airfields were not paved with massive stone slabs, but with small metal ones, which also had several holes to reduce weight.

Secondly, the Gambians claim that the partially covered slabs have always been there and did not appear in the mid-20th century. Finally, thirdly, back in January 1943, US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was passing through Banjul. This was due to the holding of a conference in Casablanca, Morocco.

During the meeting, Roosevelt and Winston Churchill, together with members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the United States and Great Britain, discussed the prospects for opening a Second Front and the strategy for combating German submarines in the Atlantic.

The port of Banjul was at that time used as a stopover for Allied naval convoys, and the mysterious airfield was favored by the US Army Air Corps. So no secret bases there simply could not be Nazis in the immediate vicinity of such a strategic Anglo-Saxon hub.

Did the allies try?

On some sites you can even find statements that Yundum, in fact, was built by the Allies themselves. So is there really no secret? ancient airfield doesn't exist? No matter how it is! The length of the runway is clearly excessive for aircraft of that time.

As we already know, local residents We saw this covering long before the war. And the color of the slabs is sharply different from concrete. There is a photograph of the only combat aircraft of the Gambian army, a Su-25 attack aircraft purchased in Georgia in 2008, standing on a platform made of concrete slabs attached to the Yundum runway.

They clearly have a different color - gray - which is what concrete should have. It can also be noted that, judging by the photographs, the sandy-brown stone slabs vary in size, and this is absolutely not typical for airfield surfaces of the 20th-21st centuries.

So the mystery of Yundum really exists, and it has yet to be solved.

Valdis PEIPINSH
Secrets of the twentieth century

There is a mysterious airfield in the small African country of Gambia. Yundum. What is the mystery of this airfield? The fact is that its main and most expensive component - the runway (runway) - was not built here, since it already existed. The runway consisted of monolithic stone slabs, carefully fitted to each other. As local residents assured, these slabs have been in this place from time immemorial...

During the construction of the airfield, all that remained was to roll asphalt onto these slabs, apply markings, and the result was a magnificent runway 3,600 meters long, capable of accommodating any modern aircraft regardless of their weight and dimensions.
It is worth noting that NASA took an active part in the creation of the Yundum airfield.

The American space agency chose it as an alternate airfield for landing its reusable space shuttles. With the help of the Americans, the necessary radio-electronic control and navigation systems were installed at Yundum, and in 1996, the international airport building, built according to a joint American-Gambian project, went into operation.

It is curious that despite the impressive length of the strip, not all ancient slabs are covered with asphalt and some of them can be seen both at its beginning and at the end. And then it turns out that the ancient runway was much more impressive than the modern one. But who took off from it? It is still difficult to answer this question - from the available publications it becomes clear that no one has conducted any research on this topic.

The areas of the strip not covered with asphalt are represented by light sandy-brown slabs carefully fitted to each other. The age of the slabs has not yet been determined. According to some publications, their surface is roughly polished, while others claim that the grinding is close to ideal. Judging by the published photographs, the first is closer to the truth, but this only speaks of the antiquity of the slabs, the perfect polishing of which could be significantly damaged by long-term weathering processes.

Attempts to explain the presence of such an impressive runway in the African wilderness led to the hypothesis that it was built in the 40s of the 20th century by the German Nazis, who allegedly exported uranium from the Black Continent during the Second World War. However, it is completely unclear why the Nazis needed to build a runway as long as , which significantly exceeded all available at that time. Opponents of this version note that the Germans at their secret military airfields built runways using small metal plates with a number of holes to reduce weight.

To build this strip, the Germans would need to open a large-scale stone-cutting production, use powerful machines and cranes. But local old-timers assure that nothing like this has ever happened here, and the slabs have always been there - under their grandfathers, great-grandfathers, great-great-grandfathers, etc.

Thus, the presence of this runway can only be explained by the assumption of some ancient earthly Civilization that built it, or by connecting it with aliens. As for the last option, it seems less convincing, because extraterrestrial ships must have the ability to land on any unprepared, albeit fairly level, place.





Recently, there has been a lot of talk about the mysterious Yundum airfield, discovered in the small African country of Gambia. This airfield is almost a legacy of ancient civilizations, which, according to some information, had aircraft - the so-called vimanas. In any case, no one knows for sure who and when Yundum was built.

This former British colony is located on the Atlantic coast of tropical Africa and belongs to the group of the most economically backward countries not only in the world as a whole, but also in its far from prosperous continent. The territory of the state is strongly elongated in the latitudinal direction. The Gambia extends 350 kilometers deep into the mainland from west to east; it is located along the bed of the deep river of the same name.

The width of the country from north to south does not exceed 50 kilometers. Just over one and a half million people live in The Gambia, including 75% in rural areas. Industry there is extremely poorly developed and consists of enterprises producing peanut butter, beer, soft drinks and clothing. Peanut exports provide the country with half of its foreign exchange earnings.

The backwardness of The Gambia is eloquently evidenced by the fact that until recently the population could only receive higher education abroad: in Senegal, the USA or Western Europe. The situation changed only in 1999, when the University of the Gambia was established in the capital Banjul. There is only one library in the country and the first museum opened not so long ago; now, however, there are already five of them.

Here, the transition at the end of the last century from manual cultivation of fields with hoes to plows drawn by oxen, horses or donkeys is considered an achievement. Equipping fishing boats with outboard motors also became evidence of Gambia's involvement in technological progress.

Of course, this small country has its own strengths. It is one of the few on the Dark Continent where a multi-party political system operates. In the vicinity of Banjul there are several magnificent resorts with spacious and clean sea beaches, where tourists from the UK love to relax. Livestock farming can be considered very developed: the number of cattle exceeds 400 thousand heads.

But in The Gambia there is a real international airport, and a mysterious one at that. This is Yundum - the same one so beloved by ufologists and alternative historians. It is located 27 kilometers from Banjul. The length of its runway (runway), which meets the highest requirements, is 3,600 meters, so Yundum is able to accommodate aircraft of any weight. The Gambians themselves did not build this expensive runway. They just laid the asphalt on the existing rough-polished stone slabs that had been cleared of soil and made markings.

The Gambia was then helped by NASA, since the American space agency was interested in creating an alternate airfield for reusable Shuttle-type spacecraft. Initially, the United States chose the airport of the Senegalese capital Dakar, but its runway has too large an angle relative to the main flight path of the shuttles. Therefore, in September 1987, the Americans reached an agreement with the Gambian side on the use of the Yundum airfield for these purposes.


Photo: Wolfgang REH

The runway has been improved. In particular, its width was increased from 29 to 45 meters. The Americans also installed the necessary electronic control and navigation systems. And in 1996, the international airport building, built according to a joint Anglo-Gambian project, was put into operation.

If you look closely at satellite images, you can see that the central part of the Yundum runway is actively used, but there are unused areas on both sides of the runway. They are paved with light slabs of an unusual sandy-brown color. There are also extensions of the strip that have not yet been cleared of land. And the trees along it grow in a very interesting way - along the lines of some faults in the soil.


Red circles mark unpaved areas of the ancient runway slabs

So where did this runway come from? The most sensational, of course, is the hypothesis that the runway was built back in the days of pre-civilization and that, very possibly, ancient Indian or Atlantean aircraft - vimanas - took off from here. However, fans of conspiracy theories made another assumption. They say the airfield was secretly built by the Germans during World War II. Sometimes a more precise date is given - 1944.

At first glance, this version is not without some plausibility. Indeed, during the war, the Nazis showed great interest in African uranium and allegedly even took it out of the Congo by plane, making several intermediate landings.

In this regard, one can even recall the secret German airfields built in the Arctic, behind the lines of Soviet troops. But as far as The Gambia is concerned, there are several big “buts”. Firstly, such airfields were not paved with massive stone slabs, but with small metal ones, which also had several holes to reduce weight.

Secondly, the Gambians claim that the partially covered slabs have always been there and did not appear in the mid-20th century. Finally, thirdly, back in January 1943, US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was passing through Banjul. This was due to the holding of a conference in Casablanca, Morocco.

During the meeting, Roosevelt and Winston Churchill, together with members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the United States and Great Britain, discussed the prospects for opening a Second Front and the strategy for combating German submarines in the Atlantic.

The port of Banjul was at that time used as a stopover for Allied naval convoys, and the mysterious airfield was favored by the US Army Air Corps. So there simply could not be any secret Nazi bases in the immediate vicinity of such a strategic Anglo-Saxon hub.

On the Internet you can even find statements that Yundum, in fact, was built by the Allies themselves. So is there really no secret to the ancient airfield? No matter how it is! The length of the runway is clearly excessive for aircraft of that time. As is known, local residents saw this covering long before the war. And the color of the slabs is sharply different from concrete.

There is a photograph of the only combat aircraft of the Gambian army, purchased in 2008 from Georgia. This is a Su-25 attack aircraft standing on a platform made of concrete slabs attached to the Yundum runway. They clearly have a different color - gray, which is what concrete should have. It can also be noted that, judging by the photographs, the sandy-brown stone slabs vary in size, and this is absolutely not typical for airfield surfaces of the 20th-21st centuries.

So the mystery of Yundum really exists, and it has yet to be solved.

Valdis Peipins

Recently, there has been a lot of talk about the mysterious Yundum airfield, discovered in the small African country of Gambia. This airfield is almost a legacy of ancient civilizations, which, according to some information, had aircraft - the so-called vimanas. In any case, no one knows for sure who and when Yundum was built.
In this photo, the red circles mark the unpaved areas of the ancient runway slabs.

This former British colony is located on the Atlantic coast of tropical Africa and belongs to the group of the most economically backward countries not only in the world as a whole, but also in its far from prosperous continent. The territory of the state is strongly elongated in the latitudinal direction. The Gambia extends 350 kilometers deep into the mainland from west to east; it is located along the bed of the deep river of the same name. The width of the country from north to south does not exceed 50 kilometers. Just over one and a half million people live in The Gambia, including 75% in rural areas. Industry there is extremely poorly developed and consists of enterprises producing peanut butter, beer, soft drinks and clothing. Peanut exports provide the country with half of its foreign exchange earnings.
The backwardness of The Gambia is eloquently evidenced by the fact that until recently the population could only receive higher education abroad: in Senegal, the USA or Western Europe. The situation changed only in 1999, when the University of the Gambia was established in the capital Banjul. There is only one library in the country and the first museum opened not so long ago; now, however, there are already five of them. Here, the transition at the end of the last century from manual cultivation of fields with hoes to plows drawn by oxen, horses or donkeys is considered an achievement. Equipping fishing boats with outboard motors also became evidence of Gambia's involvement in technological progress.
Of course, this small country has its own strengths. It is one of the few on the Dark Continent where a multi-party political system operates. In the vicinity of Banjul there are several magnificent resorts with spacious and clean sea beaches, where tourists from the UK love to relax. Livestock farming can be considered very developed: the number of cattle exceeds 400 thousand heads.

They paved, marked and flew.

But Gambia has a real international airport. Also mysterious. This is Yundum - the same one so beloved by ufologists and alternative historians. It is located 27 kilometers from Banjul. The length of its runway (runway), which meets the highest requirements, is 3600 meters, so Yundum is able to accommodate aircraft of any weight. The Gambians themselves did not build this expensive runway. They just laid the asphalt on the existing rough-polished stone slabs that had been cleared of soil and made markings.
The Gambia was then helped by NASA, since the American space agency was interested in creating an alternate airfield for reusable spacecraft such as the shuttle. Initially, the United States chose the airport of the Senegalese capital Dakar, but its runway has too large an angle relative to the main flight path of the shuttles. Therefore, in September 1987, the Americans reached an agreement with the Gambian side on the use of the Yundum airfield for these purposes. The runway has been improved. In particular, its width was increased from 29 to 45 meters. The Americans also installed the necessary electronic control and navigation systems. And in 1996, the international airport building, built according to a joint Anglo-Gambian project, was put into operation.
If you look closely at satellite images, you can see that the central part of the Yundum runway is actively used, but there are unused areas on both sides of the runway. They are paved with light slabs of an unusual sandy-brown color. There are also extensions of the strip that have not yet been cleared of land. And the trees along it grow in a very interesting way - along the lines of some faults in the soil.




Versions, versions, versions....

So where did this runway come from? The most sensational, of course, is the hypothesis that the runway was built back in the days of pre-civilization, and that, very possibly, ancient Indian or Atlantean aircraft - vimanas - took off from here. However, fans of conspiracy theories made another assumption. They say the airfield was secretly built by the Germans during World War II. Sometimes a more precise date is given - 1944. At first glance, this version is not without some plausibility. Indeed, during the war, the Nazis showed great interest in African uranium and allegedly even took it out of the Congo by plane, making several intermediate landings.
In this regard, one can even recall the secret German airfields built in the Arctic, behind the lines of Soviet troops. But as far as Gambia is concerned, there are several big “buts”. Firstly, such airfields were not paved with massive stone slabs, but with small metal ones, which also had several holes to reduce weight. Secondly, the Gambians claim that the partially covered slabs have always been there and did not appear in the mid-20th century. Finally, thirdly, back in January 1943, US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was passing through Banjul. This was due to the holding of a conference in Casablanca, Morocco. During the meeting, Roosevelt and Winston Churchill, together with members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the United States and Great Britain, discussed the prospects for opening a Second Front and the strategy for combating German submarines in the Atlantic. The port of Banjul was at that time used as a stopover for Allied naval convoys, and the mysterious airfield was favored by the US Army Air Corps. So there simply could not be any secret Nazi bases in the immediate vicinity of such a strategic Anglo-Saxon hub.


Did the allies try?

On some sites you can even find statements that Yundum, in fact, was built by the Allies themselves. So is there really no secret to the ancient airfield? No matter how it is! The length of the runway is clearly excessive for aircraft of that time. As we already know, local residents saw this covering long before the war. And the color of the slabs is sharply different from concrete. There is a photograph of the only combat aircraft of the Gambian army, a Su-25 attack aircraft purchased in Georgia in 2008, standing on a platform made of concrete slabs attached to the Yunduma runway. They clearly have a different color - gray - which is what concrete should have. It can also be noted that, judging by the photographs, the sandy-brown stone slabs vary in size, and this is absolutely not typical for airfield surfaces of the 20th-21st centuries.
So the mystery of Yundum really exists, and it has yet to be solved.

Valdis PEIPINSH
Secrets of the twentieth century