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Post by ML on Sept 16, 2019 12:59:40 GMT
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Post by Hans Schokkenbroek on Sept 16, 2019 16:08:38 GMT
At some point he mentions the canals all over Florida. Here is some more about that from Static in the Attic. It is all sooooo obvious once you open your eyes. Astounding how history can be hidden in plain sight. No wonder some call us Lulu's...... The average human being is indeed so dumbed down and oblivious to what stares them in the face....
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Post by ML on Sept 16, 2019 23:35:39 GMT
At some point he mentions the canals all over Florida. Here is some more about that from Static in the Attic. It is all sooooo obvious once you open your eyes. Astounding how history can be hidden in plain sight. No wonder some call us Lulu's...... The average human being is indeed so dumbed down and oblivious to what stares them in the face....
my head is acting funny again with these things. These LIE is way beyond level we can comprehend even.
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Post by Henrik on Sept 17, 2019 7:44:48 GMT
More of the same creepy stuff: Go to Google Maps and Albuquerque, New Mexio outside of the city. You will se massive road grid networks as if there were neighbourhoods all over and now there are only dirt roads left.
Lots of this stuff around on google maps if you know what you are looking for. The same kind of thing is up just west of New York city. The marshlands and small islands are all covered in canal systems/irrigation systems, but obviously nothing to irrigate there now, with the dams/marshes now being exposed to the salty sea.
Or got to Bladen Lakes State Forest National Park in North Carolina. You will see hoards of oval impact craters, some of them deep enought to harbor lakes, these impact craters are still very much visible after some years of human effort, clearly they are not ancient.
The Tartaria-thing is a patchwork/placeholder, with lots and lots of hearsay and unprovable theories. Nobody knows what really happened, but it is quite obvious that something happened, not too long ago, and that history is much more strange than we are being told. I really like the Tartaria-research because it is digging, not because it is necessarily accurate, too early for that.
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Post by Henrik on Sept 17, 2019 7:55:09 GMT
Maybe possible to find some contours and stuff in the Amazon as well. Earliest European explorers reported huge cities with hundreds of thousands of people there. Disease could have wiped allmost all of of them out and the forest reclaimed the cities. Speculators say many millions and a substantial amount of the world population at the time could have been living there. If so, maybe possible to find some signs on Google maps, even if it is dense jungle.
Just a quick scan, here is maybe something:
4°22'36.8"S 64°08'21.9"W
-4.376874, -64.139415
The "road" next to it seems strange. Along it are several clearings which seem old, but not too old. There is mostly no buildings there visible, but some places may be military and there are oil facilities on the far west end of the road, so some may be dig sites, but it is all very strange.
Again, I'm just speculating and "seeing" things here, but I bet more than 5 min looking around would yield something much stranger.
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Post by Henrik on Sept 17, 2019 8:10:15 GMT
Ok, so I found something strange, but nothing definite:
2°01'18.1"S 60°21'07.0"W -2.021701, -60.351937
Obviously square clearings of some sort, no current roads in our out, the top right corner "path" is a river, which means it could be a very old path now filled in by rainwater?
Other is here:
1°43'53.6"S 60°33'40.3"W
-1.731543, -60.561196
Low pixel photos all along the river and more of these "shinging squares". Could be overexposed clearings with native tribes? Or something else entirely?
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Post by ML on Sept 18, 2019 23:47:33 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Sept 19, 2019 1:58:48 GMT
"The same kind of thing is up just west of New York city. The marshlands and small islands are all covered in canal systems/irrigation systems," Henrik I grew up about 25 miles south of Boston. To the east of me was (is) a town called Duxbury. The town itself is rather wealthy and a desirable place to live. The beach area is a peninsula with the beach facing Cape Cod Bay on one side and a large saltmarsh on the other. We as kids spent a lot of time in the marsh area. Despite the muddiness of it when the tide was high the summer water was much warmer for swimming. This marsh was full of long straight canals that filled up during high tide. Legend says the native Americans dug those canals for transportation purposes and of course we took that as fact. I think more about it I now wonder if local tribes would have the resources and ability to create such waterways. Understand they would be digging them by hand! Not something I would want to do. cranberrycountymagazine.blogspot.com/2015/06/what-are-those-lines-on-duxbury-marshes.html
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Post by Deleted on Sept 27, 2019 11:33:09 GMT
It occurred to me that some of this could be left over from a previous loop or cycle... Atlantis era ?
I saw somewhere that it was estimated that some of these were more than 800 years old.... in a prior history maybe ?
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Post by ray on Oct 22, 2019 17:59:35 GMT
The canals were built by The Mound Builders according to E Fontaine's book written in about 1850. They were a river people 7 to 9 feet tall, very strong with a technologically advanced culture including metal work and tools that was spread throughout North and South America, and Europe in the B.C. period before the advent of the Mayans and Aztecs.
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Post by ML on Oct 22, 2019 23:11:26 GMT
The canals were built by The Mound Builders according to E Fontaine's book written in about 1850. They were a river people 7 to 9 feet tall, very strong with a technologically advanced culture including metal work and tools that was spread throughout North and South America, and Europe in the B.C. period before the advent of the Mayans and Aztecs. Thanks for this post Ray.
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