Paul Devereux

Paul Devereux (born 1945) is a British author, researcher, lecturer, broadcaster, artist and photographer based in the UK.

Paul Devereux' work primarily deals with archaeological themes, especially archaeoacoustics (the study of sound at archaeological sites), the anthropology of consciousness (ancient and pre-modern worldviews), ecopsychology, unusual geophysical phenomena, and consciousness studies, spanning the range from academic to popular.

His first order was an article on the mystical power of ley lines, but none of the writers could provide concrete documentation on the matter.

[2] Paul Devereux' work on ley lines was mainly focused on debunking the mystical properties falsely attributed to them.

[2] About the Nazca Lines, Paul Devereux argues that they are walking tracks, and that their pattern mainly reveal the religious beliefs of the Kogi Indians around sacred roads.

He led the Dragon Project for 10 years and admitted that there are places of high radiation where some participants experienced powerful and vivid hallucinatory episodes of spirit-like visits.

[2] Devereux is the director of the Dragon Project Trust, which in the past used scientific measuring instruments as well as primary sensing (using dowsers and self-proclaimed psychics) to test modern rumours and traditional folklore of there being "energies" at sacred places.