Sahara -1995- Apr 2026

The Sahara keeps its secrets well. But every now and then, on July 18, if you tune a shortwave radio to 5.995 MHz and listen very carefully through the static... some say you can still hear the faint echo of a market that never existed, and a single piano key, waiting to be answered.

There is no consensus. But a fringe group of geographers and "chrono-archeologists" have proposed a wild hypothesis: that the Sahara of 1995 was not the Sahara we think we know. Sahara -1995-

Most people think of the Sahara as a sea of sterile sand, broken only by the occasional oil rig or ancient caravan route. But in the summer of 1995, for exactly 47 minutes, the Sahara became the epicenter of a global mystery that has never been officially explained. The Sahara keeps its secrets well

The voice on the radio wasn't a message. It was a . There is no consensus

The coordinates: 23°42’N, 11°36’E. The timestamp: .

Side B is what broke the analysts.

For 25 years, the tape was classified by the Direction Générale de la Sécurité Extérieure (DGSE). In 2020, a heavily redacted transcript leaked to a niche forum dedicated to "place-based anomalies." According to the transcript, Side A contains 31 minutes of silence, followed by a single sentence spoken in a whisper: "The sun did not set on the old world. We buried it here."