I think you nailed it. I just knew those things were real lol
There arenāt as many as there used to be.
Has anyone else looked with Google Earth yet? Curious what a second set of eyes sees. You donāt have to zoom in very far before you see them. Iām thinking they are close to a mile wide believe it or not. Perhaps even wider. It will be perplexing if that is the case. Also at one point, It appears that a mountain formed over the ātunnelā rather than the other way around. In other words it looks like the mountain formed after the ātunnelā. Iām going to try to figure out how to put some scale to it tonight. Thought it used to just show scale on Google Earth.
Ladies and gentlemen these things are huge. One minute of latitude is 6068ā, or about 1.2 miles give or take. I calculate About 2 minutes latitude in width. 12,100 feet wide.
Looks like you have a wall surrounding an old community once on land and now under the sea. Silt may have covered whatever structures making up the city creating what you are calling a mountain?
I honestly have NO idea if it isnāt pipelinesā¦but they are so BIG .These lines go the length of the Red Sea. It looks like an array of mile wide tunnels. I can see that they go under/ thru the mountains now and that the mountains have not grown on top of the tunnel like I earlier thought.
Check out these " Tank tracks" in the Gulf of Aden. I was trying to prove to myself that they are just from current but there is absolutely no way. I took a photo where Whatever machine made those tracks made a very tight radius turn, proving to me that itās man made, or something madeā¦
The last picture shows a close up of the 90ļ¾ turn tunnel from one of my earlier posts. The tunnel that ended in a mound. Turns out the mound is 2 miles plus wide.
The 3rd photo up is a different type of line. This 1 is 30,000ā wide. Yes, 30,000 feet wide.
Hereās a close up of what I am calling the tank tracks. What the frig could this be?! It is over 4 miles wide!
A photo showing 2 different sets of tank tracks
Come on stoners you guys are seriously disappointing me. No one has interest in this? Donāt make my wife listen to me lol. She already has to deal with my weed habitš
4 miles wide well i guess it isnt HOFFA could be that pesky ex-wife tho cant really tell
Have you downloaded Google Earth? Itās very very easy to use. I seriously need another opinion here. Someone that has seen what I am seeing on Google Earth. Iām sure thereās an easy explanation for 2 mile wide tunnels and 4 mile wide tank tracksā¦ But Iām baffled. Iām not seeing any similar tunnels in the North Sea or the Persian Gulf. I canāt even find that Nordstream tunnel. Its not big enough
Hoffa is under the McCormick Center in Chicago.
My first thought was fault lines for those rank tracks buy not sure what mechanism would create a 90Ā° or less turn like that. Pretty cool stuff. A species with amnesia as Graham Hancock likes to say. Imagine whatās hidden under that water that may give us some perspective on the past. Iām still waiting for more info on that Baltic sea anomaly lol
The lines span 9 degrees latitude. The whole length of the Red Sea.
Exactlyā¦what man made mechanism that can move is over 20000ā wide!?
@GREANDAL Help a brother out. Please go on Google Earth and find these lines I am talking about. You wonāt miss them I promise. As you zoom in on Earth When the Red Sea fils up your screen you can begin to see themā¦ They are that big. You will find the tank tracks in the Gulf of Aden. I didnāt pay attention to what countries were on shore but my guess is South of Yemen
They are not fault lines. I am positive. Originally I was thinking the same thing. Then I was thinking pipelines or bordersā¦ And it isnāt those eitherā¦ Because the size is just too big.
Outta likes for the dayā¦
Possibly farming? Just like we make rows of corn. Water running between elevated plots of crops?
Once you see how massive this is everything you are thinking will change. The lines travel the distance from New York to the Carolinaās. The tank tracks head from the Gulf of Aden down towards the Seychelles islands.