Some interesting finds for sure but needs some filtering so folks focus research on actual anomalies and not old agricultural or military infrastructure ruins
An online repository of these places, each with coordinates, photos, directions to get there, local information (nearby villages, water, things to be careful of, etc.) and attempts to organize groups to explore.
I hate to be the lone voice that tries to explain this away but most of the mounds are volcanic fissures. If you go there and look at the rocks they are volcanic in nature. Most of the watering holes the guy shows are quite common in central and south America and most of them are sinkholes. Some of them extend thousands of feet down.
Something else to consider is that we have known about Mammoth Cave for hundreds of years, and the natives knew about it far longer. So why don't we know anything about it? Why are they hiding the branches that go down into the hot depths of the crust or extend as far as Texas?
Why do they call obvious manmade structures natural? Why do they hype some things as manmade but not others? Things to think about. Take this with a grain of salt, big-time. Any theory that postulates a prehistoric civilization is 3 AM history channel stuff.
Taken from series "Ruins of Old Earth, a Gary Schoenung Documentary":
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
Thanks for sharing this video it is pretty interesting. makes me want to research more.
Some interesting finds for sure but needs some filtering so folks focus research on actual anomalies and not old agricultural or military infrastructure ruins
An online repository of these places, each with coordinates, photos, directions to get there, local information (nearby villages, water, things to be careful of, etc.) and attempts to organize groups to explore.
I hate to be the lone voice that tries to explain this away but most of the mounds are volcanic fissures. If you go there and look at the rocks they are volcanic in nature. Most of the watering holes the guy shows are quite common in central and south America and most of them are sinkholes. Some of them extend thousands of feet down.
Something else to consider is that we have known about Mammoth Cave for hundreds of years, and the natives knew about it far longer. So why don't we know anything about it? Why are they hiding the branches that go down into the hot depths of the crust or extend as far as Texas?
Why do they call obvious manmade structures natural? Why do they hype some things as manmade but not others? Things to think about. Take this with a grain of salt, big-time. Any theory that postulates a prehistoric civilization is 3 AM history channel stuff.
I love Jon's style.
I was fascinated by the Tartaria theories back in 2019.
I love this shit. I looked at some of it years ago, and have been looking at it again recently.
Can't wait for the official narrative enforcers to show up in these comments and try to rationalize and explain all this away.