Lost Civilizations: Before the known

Can you explain the significance of that? Does that indicate something?

2 Likes

They were so negative that it brought down their society?

(:rofl:)

4 Likes

85% of the world’s population is rh positive , meaning there is a relationship to the rhesus monkey, but 15% of people don’t have that factor in their blood, but for some reason The Basques have a very high percentage, something like 60% look it up, very interesting stuff.

4 Likes

Will do. Thanks for sharing🤙

2 Likes

That makes me curious about that statistic in regard to Neanderthal populations. There are I understand beneficial (and not) parts of modern humans’ genomes coming from them in particular effecting the immune system.

2 Likes

Close… But DC is on the other side, in the form of a nice large turd! THATS the most logical answer anyway…

3 Likes

Holy! This thread blew up! Can’t wait for a cup of coffee in the AM, sitting in front of the woodstove catching up on the thread. Fun one

10 Likes

image

3 Likes
3 Likes

They lost me the moment they called the theories “racist.” People aren’t saying that these civilizations must have had help because they were mostly brown people; they’re saying it because they didn’t have advanced technology, and we’ve gotten so used to doing things with technology that sometimes we can’t fathom any other way. I’d call that article pure political propaganda, wrapped in the form of a commentary on lost civilizations. This is racist the same way I’m racist for owning a house, which I heard repeatedly during the last election. Democracy on its last legs, that’s all.

12 Likes

This is a great application of running with all of these ideas into a wild story.
It’s the sequel and the first film is fantastic as well but not as Vril. :smiley:

2 Likes

Oh I think the dating is super flawed.

Carbon 14 dating doesn’t take any extra radiation, from say the Carrington solar storm event, into consideration. It assumes that the rate of carbon 14 decay has been steady on this plant for thousands of years and there’s nothing to say that is the case.

Digging around structures to find tools so they can date them and say that’s when it was built and with what. Because when I build stuff, I always just leave my tools laying around it to rot for centuries… especially in heavily used areas. /s

10 Likes

somebody said the pyramids date to a time when the Nile was at a very high level. if this is true, its probably evidence they were built, welll… by man. Also i recall Stonesamples match a Rock thats found upstream of the Nile river…

But who to trust?

I saw these Southamerican Monuments (forgot name) and some say they were infact extreemly precise. And could hardly been made by man, CAUSE there were no Instruments found at all from that timeperiod… Just a few shevy hammers, wich some say wouldent been suited to build such precise surfaces. Or very unlikely.

Whatever it is, its really astonishing what happend.
I mean the Alien Associations doesent mean anything. (Alien like creatures Pics, strange Magnetism found in Stones, i saw it on TV, them still speaking of Gods from above, and pointing to the sky more particullar like Christs do.) It makes sense they saw Aliens, and they were so fascinated, that they built all this stuff.

1 Like

Survival courses teach how to start a fire with flint and steel, which is absurd when you think about it. If someone has the presence of mind to buy flint and steel, they have the presence of mind to procure a lighter. Lighters are way more common than flint and steel.
Remember the rule of threes regarding survival.
You’ll survive:
3 seconds under direct attack
3 minutes without oxygen
3 hours (roughly) to succumb to hypothermia
3 days without water
3 weeks without food
Oh, and don’t waste your money on flint and steel.

5 Likes

Im not an easy believer. Im just saying, well, anything seems atleast justified to think

2 Likes

Doce Angulos, or Twelve Angles. I’ve been there.
The Inca and even the Aymara (whom the Incas conquered in establishing their empire) said those monuments were there when they first got there.
A friend of mine said those stones could have been cut with a very powerful stream of water. They have the precipitous terrain that would work for that. They could dam up water that flows down the very precipitous hills and mountains, run it through an ever-narrowing canal downhill. That’s just one possible “how.” The “who”, “when” and “why” remain a total mystery.

3 Likes

:rofl:

I recall reading about this and evidence of water pooling found in the lower pyramid chambers. The made a computer model and found that if water was in there it would generate a type of energy as the water moved up and down. I don’t recall fully but the data that came out of the model was wild.

Funny enough, in my car I have a bag with “OH FUCK” written on it. Water tablets, filters, food, candles, mylar blankets, ponchos, parachute chord and a flint & the steel is a broken hack saw blade.

That’s totally fair. The thing I love about this subject matter is that you don’t have to believe it to find it interesting, or take it into wild places for entertainment value (as long as you are not actually trying to offend someone). A great example is the trailer for the film Iron Sky 2 I posted earlier above; it’s only offensive to horrible people (as based on Scandi values) so it’s rather entertaining as long as you take it as the crowdfunded poke at everything involved it is intended to be)

That’s actually a really good thought. Considering water = life and so many civs harnessed how to move it (fantastic examples at Petra where any and all rain or condensation was channeled though carved gullies into cisterns deep underground (a la fremen) where the heat and evaporation would remain minimal.)

If you chip out a channel into a medium, run water down it and then maintain consistent mechanical abrasion and constant water flow it would wear down really well and as a bonus the spoils are fine enough to go with the flow of water and be carried away if done right. Say you add a heavy aggregate that’s starts large enough to then add to the abrasion the whole process gets faster.

If the aggregate is large enough to tumble from one end of the channel in the medium to the other, but heavy enough to fall out of the water’s flow into a sluice (like gold does) allowing the fine spoils from the medium to wash away, you could continuously reuse this aggregate over and over!

:thinking: :exploding_head:

4 Likes

Most think they cut rocks with ropes and sand.

They didn’t have the metallurgy for things like carbide saws. Water makes no sense, takes too long. They didn’t have waterjet cutters.

4 Likes

Those photos are of the Amazon pyramids?
It looks very much Mayan.

It’s only possible to see that it is eight sided on the longest or shortest day of the year( I believe) when Shadows make it possible for us to see.

3 Likes