Secrets of Coral Castle

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I'll never tell...
 
I remember a post like this long ago on BGOL. This kat supposedly had the "secret" :)

He did publish some of that "secret", but no-one at that time could understand it, and the US patent office wouldn't fuck with him.

I found out about dude years ago watching my fav program "In search of". Anyway I ran across this while I was doing research on planetary grids or "Ley Lines" more to come on Ley lines later.
 
i wonder how dude did that...that type of knowledge would be useful as fuck. Makes you wonder why the land was so important and if he could have accomplished the same anywhere.
 
Man, brought childhood memories flooding back with that "in Search Of" theme song. I use to watch this show all the time and even remember this episode in detail.

In any event, I saw a recent documentary where they pretty much solved how Stonehenge was created as well a for what purpose. Part of the apparent mystery lay in the fact that we in modern times are wont to underestimate just how much time those people had on their hands.


 
Damn, I remember "In search of" nobody knows how he built it or how he moved it. That's deep.....
 
good fuckin drop man. as far as ley lines go.

http://witcombe.sbc.edu/earthmysteries/EMLeyLines.html

Ley lines, or Leys, are alignments of ancient sites stretching across the landscape. Ancient sites or holy places may be situated in a straight line ranging from one or two to several miles in length. A ley may be identified simply by an aligned placing of marker sites, or it might be visible on the ground for all or part of its length by the remnants of an old straight track.

Ley Lines were 're-discovered' on 30 June 1921 by Alfred Watkins (1855-1935), a locally well-known and respected Herefordshire businessman, who while looking at a map for features of interest noticed a straight line that passed over hill tops through various points of interest, all of which were ancient. At the time of his discovery, Watkins had no theory about alignments but on that June afternoon saw "in a flash" a whole pattern of lines stretching across the landscape. Four years later, in 1925, he described his vision in a book he titled The Old Straight Track:

Seattle Ley Line.
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