-------------- Approved For Release 2000/08/07 CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1400840001-5 COORDINATE REMOTE VIEWING TRAINING (CRVT) CRVT Report: 958 DATE/TIME CONDUCTED: 021310 NovB2 SOURCE 63 FILE 14 SITE: Cayambe Glacier, Equador EVALUATION: Valid Sl, S2 Good work Approved For Release 2000/08/07 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1400840001-5 -M e-EV Approved For Release 2000/08/07 CIA-RDP96-00788ROO14008400 - 2 NOIJ81Z 1310 D -7 73 00-S Approved For Release 2000/08/07 CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1400840001-5 -z- Approved For Release 2000/08/07 CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1400840001-5 Oj 0 CIT) Approved For Release 2000/08/07 CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1400840001-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/07 CIA-RE096-00788ROO1400840001-5 COVV 71 IbL-1~0(11 C, Approved For Release 2000/08/07 CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1400840001-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/0~7q=-RDP96-00788 73 840001-5 oo's Approved For Release 2000/08/07 CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1400840001-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/0r- bA 7-RDP96-00788 ROO 1jWOPj=C - - ~-T Approved For Release 2000/08/07 CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1400840001-5 Approved For Release 2000/08/07: CIA-RDP96-00788 ROO I dOnRAnnn 1-AN 80 Ei &1~0,* 7 3'_ I.N AM ERIC HWY.- 7S t (Limones)Valde renZo STATUTE MILES Q Z Jq erres Railroads Road, E Riover A?4f Smeraida ~e a, Atacdl,,, % vice es with Scheduled Air Ser PuntaGalera 4 4, 11 Fields I Elevations in Feet Cabo de San Frandsc n9 +1 ~1,to A is Pu. PACIF 71, .Boca ar San Mig, de Cojinaes t~n, b e/. 12! -91a 'fla Cec put"Majb,- Pekrnales Anto San n M~R _*1 6 de OCEAN 115,696 cullabeno Cabo Pasado achac AAs 4.,. 4V4 n &15,4 'rt 217 u Rocafua~ L S igv-edo n Isla a Tlwacna J Puer- Be awst,, do Cay Canon4*tV rhe bound4ji.y.& ;;&,4~qado' re. C*r r a s 414 ErV' do,/Il 7 iam ZR. i Rio 7. 2S 50-unam,6, Na Anc6 V 'I"T'R Y um a Chu 11 Mau iqBob6n za Pi ay 8 [1 Vu A:" poso d Golfo dr. Su ona Troza~e ol '176 Guayaquil. Unds S i -on ~ I 'k, n ----- -- anarn Isla Santa Clara uq~+ 10'N COSTA RICA') PA 4 Jamb a ~IZA Hua R P E4W B Tumbei Pacific C91,0MBIA arurn S Galapjq~sj i Maya PAN AM ICAN -T ECU (AurERN 0 25 50 75 %1, Pinta W -4 STATUTE MILES I. Genovesa Ancora E T MAR INAL marchena W 7ROPO;ED) 6.6 AMIC +S,312 goo I by Ecu. I L ls1aSanSalvador If 0; 1 1 ~'a Isla .1 10 Fernandin 1,3 Isla Santa Cruz uyo n iueriaAs Las 'Pt'j. A ace; oreno , " Cris I t6ba ~Pe spdlf?oli~~ Isla nta Mar" 'I a GALAPAGOSISLANDS 7 ARTOrIIA 1~, (ARCHIPItLAGO DE COLft Y IGNAL r~.E R IET -1 Much of the raw eastern jungle formerly clai med UGH NAMED for the Ecluato it Lqd_d1S5_,_ !0 - _F _aL r - t it T-Colorado-'s Z~7E~cadEr cont.4insorm ost5of eg h!j__ by Ecuador has been ceded to Colombia and Bra climats~, Lncjq.&g_pqlArj9ld, within its 400-mile zil; the nation currently disputes 70,000 square breadth and four-mile miles held by Peru. Ecuador's eerie Galapagos height. Volcano-spired Islands shelter strange forms of life. Andean highlands wall AREA: 104,506 square miles. POPULATION: 5,500,000; jilngle an 0 ow - . (Ldqs"r 40% Indian (mainly in highlands and jungle), 10% white -aloZihe Pacific Ocean (mostly Spanish), 10% Negro (concentrated in coastal from steaming Amazon ciLies),and 40% mestizo and mulaLto. LANGUAGE: Span- headwaters in the remote interior to the cast. ' ish; Quechua and other Indian tongues. RELIGION: Once the northern bastion of the Iqca, FmpLre, Roman Catholic, ECONOMY: 50% of people engaged in agriculture: bananas, coffee, cacao, rice, beef, balsa; some Ecuador has known three centuries of cloistered light industry, mining, oil, CIIIEF CITIES: Guayaquil rule by Spain and 146 years of independence (population 650,000), seaport; Quito (450,000), capital; marked by tempestuous politics. Cuenca (61,000), trade. 263 CPYRGHT Approved For Release 2000/08/07: CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1400840001-5 THE hQUAYUK I(D I C) CO ~Zt I.- -Em 0 LL 0 CL CL RN 7~ A 71~1 4 At N ;j, J, 411`0 6 ~ 1 ' -: - -,,CAYAMSE a W 1r, Y --.5, a, WChildren of the Dar 7,000-foot-Iii [`h"cSan Antonio Marisol Lema (abo,,cuador's F"quatorial Monument, w] hich pro -on(is. Only 30 noiles east 1.) it 7 000 fe t claims 0 degrees, 0) se( I e 4 h w falls a latitude on Os~ Nlaria'Supalo. jr igher, sn AW and IS h i dog as they guaif the autho to CaNambe, who,;e lofty slopes spawn tacier I o cross~ the Equator (pages 2 74-5). Striding earth's beltli~ot in the Northern Hemisphere aier in the Southern, Jack Cook cros.,i n 18,996 Cay 1614 am., Mist wre,ke figure6 of other dimbers on a npping as they circle toward the Sul gleaming -er of beyond the cleft at left. e ri,, ice lies only 40 miles frovw moun- taineers traverse its fissurf o exDlore this highest peak on_ the Masked against zero cod against dazzling sunlight, jackeit, and R6mulo Pazmiiio pause h at the 18.000-foot level on Cotor,~.nts later they ascended the remainject, mak- ing 16-year-old Cook oryoungeA climbers ever to-conquer. Distant nnmn nnirn thrmiah nfniid Ir 11N)