
GeoEye / DigitalGlobe via Google
Satellite imagery shows a zigzag road leading to a pair of circle-plus-diamond symbols created in the New Mexico desert. A Scientology spokeswoman confirms that the facility is home to a scriptural storage vault.
An underground storage vault built in the mountains of New Mexico has returned to the spotlight as a purported "space alien cathedral" linked to Scientology. The site, which features an airstrip and two 1,200-foot-wide (360-meter-wide) symbols on a mountain next door to Mesa Huerfanita, makes a splash in a new book and several spin-off press reports. But it's actually been known about for more than a decade — and has nothing to do with flagging down aliens.
"As has been covered in the media for years, the facility is a Church of Scientology archival storage for the preservation of L. Ron Hubbard's scriptural writings and lectures," church spokeswoman Karin Pouw told NBC News in an email. "Archival sites are common among religions, such as the LDS faith's large genealogical archive in Utah and the Vatican archives."
The storage facility, popularly known as the Trementina Base, is about 200 miles north of Roswell, N.M. It's featured in "The Church of Fear: Inside the Weird World of Scientology," an e-book by BBC investigative journalist John Sweeney that went on sale today. In an excerpt published last week by The Sun, a British tabloid, Sweeney quotes his sources, including an ex-Scientologist, as saying the circle-and-diamond symbols carved into the mountain were designed to guide church leaders to Hubbard's works "after a nuclear Armageddon wipes out humanity."
Pouw said the remarks in The Sun and in Britain's Daily Mail were "fiction." The Sun's headline called the symbols a "giant 'hello' to E.T." — but Pouw said they had a more mundane purpose.
"Because [the facility] is in such a remote area, the most practical way to it is by air," she wrote. "The corporate logo of the church that operates the facility is carved into the ground to help pilots find the facility. This, too, is commonly done by major corporations."
The Church of Scientology is known as a secretive religious organization with some out-of-the-mainstream beliefs — for example, the claim that extraterrestrial civilizations have intervened in earthly affairs over millions of years. It’s also known as a church with some big-name believers, such as Hollywood actors Tom Cruise and Kirstie Alley.
As Pouw noted, the New Mexico vault and the symbols have been the subject of news reports going back at least to 1998, when ABC's "20/20" program broadcast footage of the facility.
Many of the past week’s accounts have suggested that the base is a newly revealed secret — in fact, the links to a Scientology-affiliated organization are as clear to see as those circle-and-diamond symbols. The symbols were trademarked long ago by the Church of Spiritual Technology, or CST, which says it's an autonomous church created "outside of the Scientology ecclesiastical hierarchy" to preserve and archive Scientology's scriptures.
On its Web page, the CST says it has preserved Hubbard's works "on more than 135 tons of archival books, stainless-steel plates and nickel-plated records."
"These materials are, in turn, stored in 2,300 titanium capsules housed in calamity-proof vaults to ensure the timeless preservation and survival of the Scientology scripture," the CST says.
So what's new about Sweeney's report? Mostly, it's that he made the effort to drive as close as he could to the New Mexico site — all the way up to a locked steel gate, watched by security cameras.
"I press an intercom button," Sweeney writes in The Sun's book excerpt. "A voice says 'Hello' in what sounds like a Scandinavian accent. I announce that I'm John Sweeney and ask nicely for a tour. We are not invited in and the intercom simply spouts white noise. We drive back to civilization, wondering what kind of religion builds a space alien cathedral underground."
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Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.


They should also sock away a hand-cranked Victrola style turntable, in case the solar powered one breaks down.
Scientologists are certified idiots. Why even consider them?
They've gone to all the trouble of becoming certified; considering them is the least we can do.
And don't forget, this s**t is tax-free!
Indeed. The "Church" of Scientology is really a corporation, and is run like a corporation, with a CEO. The IRS needs to regain some courage and tax it like a corporation.
Why do you single out Scientology and not the other religions? All religions say gods from heavens created us in their image and told us how to live. I think we should tax them all.
and they should be doubly taxed for their interference in politics. No one is more self serving and bigoted than any religious group. Other than the combination of religious politician.
I feel scientology is a cult, not a religion. Maybe in 4-500 years, if it's still around, it'll earn the title 'religion'.
I say this because unlike Catholics, Southern Baptists, Islam, Buddhism, etc. Scientologists are insanely secretive and unwelcoming.
I agree that all 'faith-based' organizations should pay taxes. They benefit from police, schools, roads, and firefighters, yet they pay nothing into the goverment(s) that provide these essentials. True, many chruches preform acts of charity and that helps society, but they are NOT required to.
All that paraphernalia to store the works of a really bad Science Fiction writer?
the circle-and-diamond symbols carved into the mountain were designed to guide church leaders to Hubbard's works "after a nuclear Armageddon wipes out humanity.
If mankind is wiped out, who's going to find the vaults?
The elite few who waited it out at a safe base on Mars? LOL
Tax all religious cults this one especially.
You actually thought you'd be invited in and given a deluxe tour, perhaps lunch?!?!? -- that's a laugh . . . I guess when you're running one of the biggest scams in the world today, of course you wouldn't want strangers (outsiders) nosing around in all your little business strategies and other money-making adventures . . . it's sad when a mentally ill, demented science fiction writer like L. Ron Hubbard dupes -- and continues to dupe after his death -- so many people and fleece them for all the cash they can get. That's the only name of their game . . . get the cash, nothing else matters.
Want to get "clear"? . . . there's a healthy price for that, too! . . . P.T. Barnum was so right when he said "there's a sucker born every minute". Scientology is living proof of that.
I couldn't help to imagine that they could be using that facility to count all of their money .
Church spokeswoman Karin Pouw says:
"Because [the facility] is in such a remote area, the most practical way to it is by air," she wrote. "The corporate logo of the church that operates the facility is carved into the ground to help pilots find the facility. This, too, is commonly done by major corporations."
Why is the same logo at the Creston Ranch where Hubbard died? There isn't an airstrip there.
How sad that people are so afraid of reality they will grasp at any ridiculous idiocy in the hope of avoiding their fate. On the other hand it is rather humorous and no more foolish than the run of the mill tax evading businesses that are the mainstream religions of today.
Anybody seen Travolta lately? A walking talking example of how these cults can completely warp a weak mind.
And I find it offensive that 'science' is part of their name. I guess bat-sh!t-ology was already taken.
For all the comments on here, ditto. I agree with everyone.