A montage of clips from various documentaries most of which have been mentioned prior, though there was 1 clip I haven't seen yet starting at the 6:45 mark,,,

Lamaism and the Kan-jur according to the clip contains accounts of godlike visitors,,,a SECRET CODE most complex devised referencing gods appearing in the sky, luminous pearls, transparent spheres in which they live,,,




Lamaism
(Thibetan, bLama* lord, master, teacher), the prevailing religion of Thibet and some other parts of Asia. It is a form of Buddhism modified by the adoption of some of the doctrines and practices of Sivaism, one of the religions of India, and Shamanism or spirit worship, a Mongolian superstition. The most essential features of Lamaism are described in the article Buddhism, vol. iii., pp. 399 et seq. Of the religion of Thibet previous to the introduction of Buddhism nothing certain is known. According to the Thibetan and Chinese annals, a king of Thibet named Ssrong-bTsan-sGam-po (the upright wise prince), who reigned in the early part of the 7th century, was the introducer of Buddhism into that country. He had two wives, one from China, the other from Nepaul, in both which countries Buddhism had been established for several hundred years. These princesses brought with them Buddhistic books and idols. For the preservation of the latter, temples were built at Lassa (Lha-ssa, god-land), which afterward became and still remains the great metropolis of Lamaism. In 032 Ssrong-bTsan sent his prime minister Thumi-Ssam-bho-ta to Nepaul to study Buddhism, and to adapt the Devanagari or Sanskrit alphabet, to the Thibetan language. [http://www.chestofbooks.com/reference/American-Cyclopaedia-6/Lamaism.html#.UUZ--Vf8CVp]

Kangyur
The Tibetan Buddhist canon is a loosely defined list of sacred texts recognized by various schools of Tibetan Buddhism, made up of the Kangyur or Kanjur ('The Translation of the Word') and the Tengyur or Tanjur (Tengyur) ('Translation of Treatises').  [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kangyur]