Win / Conspiracies
Conspiracies
Sign In
DEFAULT COMMUNITIES All General AskWin Funny Technology Animals Sports Gaming DIY Health Positive Privacy
Reason: None provided.

Going to mention what I have said before.

1 picture could be higher tide, one picture could be lower tide.

Or even better yet, do you think we can tell the scale of 1/2 a foot from a distance of what looks like at least a 1000 yards?

Over the past 100 years, global temperatures have risen about 1 degree C (1.8 degrees F), with sea level response to that warming totaling about 160 to 210 mm (with about half of that amount occurring since 1993), or about 6 to 8 inches.

You can call it fake, but you can go visit some sea ruins if you want.

Got two choices here, one was built by man and then was swallowed by the water.

Or it was built by mermaids. Take your pick.

https://www.wwltv.com/article/news/local/st-bernard/archeologist-may-have-found-an-ancient-city-off-the-coast-of-st-bernard/289-5fe907e3-5439-46af-89b9-ae9e6dc35918

Lmao, this is a weird article that I just randomly picked. Dude is talking about a pyramid

He produced underwater sonar images of what he claims are remnants of major buildings, including a large pyramid.

“Which produces an electromagnetic energy that’s incredible,” Gelé said. “It is apparently 280 feet tall.”

St. Bernard Parish shrimper Ricky Robin says he’s experienced the energy firsthand. He claims the compass on his boat spun completely around near the area where Gelé pinpointed the tip of the pyramid and that’s not all.

“Everything will go out on your boat, all your electronics,” Robin said. “Like as if you were in the Bermuda Triangle. That’s exactly what we got here.”

https://youtu.be/PKm0eRfFFfo

Better example. "The underwater forest"

Or this recent discovering making the rounds lately.

https://cosmosmagazine.com/history/archaeology/landmass-northwest-australia-sahul/

“We worked out that there was a massive archipelago that extended right out towards Indonesia, between 70,000-61,000 years ago, and which was stable for 9,000 years,” says Norman.

This archipelago connected the modern-day Kimberley, in northern WA, with Arnhem Land at the top of the NT. Then, sea levels rose and began to fluctuate more through a period arhaeologists call Marine Isotope Stage 3.

“As you come into the last Ice Age, sea levels drop really dramatically. They drop right down to negative 120 meters compared to today’s levels.

“At that point, that huge area of land between the Kimberley and Arnhem Land is completely exposed.”

This area was about 390,000km2: 1.5 times the size of New Zealand, or slightly larger than Japan.

“In the middle of that was a gigantic inland sea. It was connected to the Indian Ocean through the Malita Valley, which was this 200km long canyon that was tidal at its mouth,” says Norman.

Demographic modellers in the research team estimate that at different points the archipelago and landmass could have supported between 50,000 and 500,000 people.

But this vast landscape had a startling downfall as the ice began to melt and sea levels rose, between 14,000-9,000 years ago. The change was sharpest during a point called Meltwater Pulse A.

“100,000 kilometres of that northwest shelf region went underwater in 400 years,” says Norman.

“It changed from being about a metre per 100 years of sea level rise to four metres, sometimes higher.

“People that were living in this region would have seen the landscape going underwater, almost before their eyes. It would have changed incredibly dramatically in the space of their lifespan.”

Perhaps its all fake, perhaps humans actually had an industrial revolution 9000 years ago?

Or perhaps, its really like all those old stories talk about, the heavens stopping and changing positions and silly things like that, lol.

Who knows? Im dumb for even noticing the connections.

291 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Going to mention what I have said before.

1 picture could be higher tide, one picture could be lower tide.

Or even better yet, do you think we can tell the scale of 1/2 a foot from a distance of what looks like at least a 1000 yards?

Over the past 100 years, global temperatures have risen about 1 degree C (1.8 degrees F), with sea level response to that warming totaling about 160 to 210 mm (with about half of that amount occurring since 1993), or about 6 to 8 inches.

You can call it fake, but you can go visit some sea ruins if you want.

Got two choices here, one was built by man and then was swallowed by the water.

Or it was built by mermaids. Take your pick.

https://www.wwltv.com/article/news/local/st-bernard/archeologist-may-have-found-an-ancient-city-off-the-coast-of-st-bernard/289-5fe907e3-5439-46af-89b9-ae9e6dc35918

Lmao, this is a weird article that I just randomly picked. Dude is talking about a pyramid Or this recent discovering making the rounds lately.

He produced underwater sonar images of what he claims are remnants of major buildings, including a large pyramid.

“Which produces an electromagnetic energy that’s incredible,” Gelé said. “It is apparently 280 feet tall.”

St. Bernard Parish shrimper Ricky Robin says he’s experienced the energy firsthand. He claims the compass on his boat spun completely around near the area where Gelé pinpointed the tip of the pyramid and that’s not all.

“Everything will go out on your boat, all your electronics,” Robin said. “Like as if you were in the Bermuda Triangle. That’s exactly what we got here.”

https://youtu.be/PKm0eRfFFfo

Better example. "The underwater forest"

https://cosmosmagazine.com/history/archaeology/landmass-northwest-australia-sahul/

“We worked out that there was a massive archipelago that extended right out towards Indonesia, between 70,000-61,000 years ago, and which was stable for 9,000 years,” says Norman.

This archipelago connected the modern-day Kimberley, in northern WA, with Arnhem Land at the top of the NT. Then, sea levels rose and began to fluctuate more through a period arhaeologists call Marine Isotope Stage 3.

“As you come into the last Ice Age, sea levels drop really dramatically. They drop right down to negative 120 meters compared to today’s levels.

“At that point, that huge area of land between the Kimberley and Arnhem Land is completely exposed.”

This area was about 390,000km2: 1.5 times the size of New Zealand, or slightly larger than Japan.

“In the middle of that was a gigantic inland sea. It was connected to the Indian Ocean through the Malita Valley, which was this 200km long canyon that was tidal at its mouth,” says Norman.

Demographic modellers in the research team estimate that at different points the archipelago and landmass could have supported between 50,000 and 500,000 people.

But this vast landscape had a startling downfall as the ice began to melt and sea levels rose, between 14,000-9,000 years ago. The change was sharpest during a point called Meltwater Pulse A.

“100,000 kilometres of that northwest shelf region went underwater in 400 years,” says Norman.

“It changed from being about a metre per 100 years of sea level rise to four metres, sometimes higher.

“People that were living in this region would have seen the landscape going underwater, almost before their eyes. It would have changed incredibly dramatically in the space of their lifespan.”

Perhaps its all fake, perhaps humans actually had an industrial revolution 9000 years ago?

Or perhaps, its really like all those old stories talk about, the heavens stopping and changing positions and silly things like that, lol.

Who knows? Im dumb for even noticing the connections.

291 days ago
1 score
Reason: Original

Going to mention what I have said before.

1 picture could be higher tide, one picture could be lower tide.

Or even better yet, do you think we can tell the scale of 1/2 a foot from a distance of what looks like at least a 1000 yards?

Over the past 100 years, global temperatures have risen about 1 degree C (1.8 degrees F), with sea level response to that warming totaling about 160 to 210 mm (with about half of that amount occurring since 1993), or about 6 to 8 inches.

You can call it fake, but you can go visit some sea ruins if you want.

Got two choices here, one was built by man and then was swallowed by the water.

Or it was built by mermaids. Take your pick.

https://www.wwltv.com/article/news/local/st-bernard/archeologist-may-have-found-an-ancient-city-off-the-coast-of-st-bernard/289-5fe907e3-5439-46af-89b9-ae9e6dc35918

Or this recent discovering making the rounds lately.

https://cosmosmagazine.com/history/archaeology/landmass-northwest-australia-sahul/

“We worked out that there was a massive archipelago that extended right out towards Indonesia, between 70,000-61,000 years ago, and which was stable for 9,000 years,” says Norman.

This archipelago connected the modern-day Kimberley, in northern WA, with Arnhem Land at the top of the NT. Then, sea levels rose and began to fluctuate more through a period arhaeologists call Marine Isotope Stage 3.

“As you come into the last Ice Age, sea levels drop really dramatically. They drop right down to negative 120 meters compared to today’s levels.

“At that point, that huge area of land between the Kimberley and Arnhem Land is completely exposed.”

This area was about 390,000km2: 1.5 times the size of New Zealand, or slightly larger than Japan.

“In the middle of that was a gigantic inland sea. It was connected to the Indian Ocean through the Malita Valley, which was this 200km long canyon that was tidal at its mouth,” says Norman.

Demographic modellers in the research team estimate that at different points the archipelago and landmass could have supported between 50,000 and 500,000 people.

But this vast landscape had a startling downfall as the ice began to melt and sea levels rose, between 14,000-9,000 years ago. The change was sharpest during a point called Meltwater Pulse A.

“100,000 kilometres of that northwest shelf region went underwater in 400 years,” says Norman.

“It changed from being about a metre per 100 years of sea level rise to four metres, sometimes higher.

“People that were living in this region would have seen the landscape going underwater, almost before their eyes. It would have changed incredibly dramatically in the space of their lifespan.”

Perhaps its all fake, perhaps humans actually had an industrial revolution 9000 years ago?

Or perhaps, its really like all those old stories talk about, the heavens stopping and changing positions and silly things like that, lol.

Who knows? Im dumb for even noticing the connections.

291 days ago
1 score