It's consistent in that it has STL in there with no vowel breaking it up.
But why not Nostlantis?
It's consistent in that it has STL in there with no vowel breaking it up.
But why not Nostlantis?
Actually yeah nostlantis sounds better than whatever it is I called it
I believe the real Atlantis wasn't far from here. Built into the Richat Structure. According to Plato's descriptions, it lines up pretty much spot on.
Nope, the richat structure was orders of magnitude bigger.
Following Plato’s description faithfully leads to the same conclusions geologists are coming up with: there was a large island continent in the Atlantic that sank around 12,000 years ago.
Randal Carlson does a great job in his 7 part series of Atlantis, saying it’s sunk in the Azores.
Atlantis speculation is fun.
It’s also wild that aboriginal stories exist about the flooding that happened circa 15,000 years ago with the meltwater pulse of the last ice age.
Neolithic history had to put up with climate change that was an entire order of magnitude more dramatic than anything we are worried about, as Europe and North America shed enormous land ice sheets that were miles thick.
100%. Super fun and wake up call as to what the true dangers of climate change are. Ice ages are no joke
Climate change, like solar weather and meteorites. Yes, people have been sold this story that nukes could do as much damage but honestly I doubt it. Maybe if they put AIs in charge of the red button, without a Petrov to watch it.
Of course criminals accuse the innocent, anyone but them, to be plotting mass murder.
It's the Richat Structure lol. Totally makes sense they built concentric ringed canals on top of a natural formation from an ancient volcano. There isn't that many of these in the world. I dunno if you have read "The Apocalypse of Yajnavalkya" but the big picture they paint in that book really convinced me.
Their thesis is based on the geological history involving the cold period known as the Dryas that led to the Stone Age, about 12000 years ago. Their hypothesis was that it was triggered by a massive meteor storm that struck the earth across north america, the atlantic and europe, up to the Black Sea. (btw, there's good reason to believe that Noah lived in what is now Bulgaria and his boat floated into the black sea and out into the greek archipelago).
It goes further also, and says that they predicted the coming of the storm and relocated their settlement to what is modern Egypt, amongst other things building the great pyramids and the Sphinx, and the egyptians of modern times were mostly descendants of peoples who discovered the abandoned structures after the Atlanteans took off in the direction of the Taurus constellation, specifically the legendary Pleiades.
Tartarus is underneath Tenerife tho. The name itself kinda hints at it, ten- as in tension, peniTENt, and now I am in portuguese speaking land, the word for "hold" or "have" is also related to this root. I kinda didn't realise just how much influence Latin had on Bulgarian quite until I started to learn a bit of Portuguese. The grammar of the two languages is very very close. I always thought the phonetics were connected, the portuguese love the SH consonant a lot, just like the slavs, though they use it mostly for plurals.
Also, Madeira was known by the ancient greeks as "The Blessed Isles" and its only downside was the rough coastline which apparently was seen to have whales dashed on it by the ancient greeks.
Having spent some time around the coast of this island I can understand. It's a meatgrinder of a coastline. Really young. Mostly still pretty much sharp stones. The chinese shop in Santa Cruz had beach rock protection shoes pretty much right at the front of their showroom. I got a pair, they are essential if you wade into the beaches. The sea is intense, to be honest, you have to be really strong swimmer to go out there in most parts, it's not gentle. Not intense, most of the time, but rarely still enough that you can chill, and absolutely zero natural sandy beaches.
Anyhow, there's my crazy piece on it.
I'm sure the Azores are important in some way to this whole story, but they are the upper edge of the cluster of islands that goes down through Madeira, the Canaries and Cape Verde. The climate there is very suitable for cows. The land is substantially older than here in Madeira, and as such a lot more plains land that you can grow grass on.
How do you explain how the dimensions are completely off from Plato’s?
Have a read of the Book of Enoch. The dimensions almost always are mangled in the long time these stories lived only as oral stories, no matter how fastidious the culture was about retaining their correctness. Humans mostly live around 100 years, at best.
The other point is that the volcanoes in the Atlantic, such as this one on Madeira and the ones on the Canaries and so on... aren't that old. Not old enough that weathering could so completely erode them down like we see with Richat.
You really need to see real life young volcanic land to understand just how much older a place that had its geometry defined by an ancient volcano must be than anything in the atlantic.
The entire ocean of this planet is only 200 million years old, or so. The land is much older. There MUST have been a time when this planet was land with only rivers and lakes breaking up the monotony of the variously aged stone of fresh and very old volcanic crystallization.
I'm fascinated that so many y'all are getting into this stuff now. My intuition is that this is all very very relevant and that what caused the Great Flood is about to return.
Fascinating stuff, I only got into it this year. Feel free to share resources or books.
Hopefully we can start building this lost knowledge and piece things together. I think Nostr will have a role to play as it make information even more modular and networked than the internet.
And no have not read any of those books
Recently I read Supernatural by Graham Hancock who tries to synthesise mythological and religious traditions with real happenings, and mentions the book of Enoch, and the idea of the fallen angels, angel-human hybrids, abductions, etc. crazy stuff
yep, it's that kind of thing. Heavily referenced though, and the thesis pivots on genetic mutations brought on by a cosmic ray burst from a nearby star about 40,000 years ago that mostly killed everything on australia and antarctica, namely, one that causes albinism and white skin/red/blonde hair, and one that disables the lactase switch that most mammals have after weaning.
BTW, before anyone starts suggesting it's a white supremacy thing, the bad guys in the story are also white. The whole meme about white supremacy is one of their psychological manipulation tactics, and their own viewpoint, since they are white (the bad guys in the stories, referred to as "The Watchers" in the book of Daniel and elsewhere.)
Also, I didn't intentionally pick to start drinking milk as my main dietary staple because of this story, it was simply cheap and I tested it out and didn't get an allergic reaction. I get allergic reactions from almost all animal products fed on seeds, and sometimes I can even smell the traces of the corn oil in the meat especially when I stew it.
Most of my milk comes from a wet, grass covered, flat island group, the Azores, and even when they don't make a song and dance about it, most of it is actually pasture fed, because over there there is space and endless water from the north sea winds. Sometimes I find a tiny problem with the mainland sourced supermarket brands, Continente and Pingo Doce. Pingo seems to be the worst, but Continente is not so great.
Neither of them cause me a problem in comparison to the eggs I just bought the other day, which likely were produced right here in Madeira. For two days my breath was short, had 4 on day one and then two the next day.
Regardless of this, as the diet has taken its effects on my body, it seems to me like a milk-heavy diet might promote longevity. It certainly makes my skin clearer.
Keep in mind that I am pretty sure the situation would be even better if it was raw goat and sheep milk. Cow milk is a USA/western Europe thing. I'm hoping to have my own farm in a year or two and run a herd of goats, and get on a diet of raw goat milk and (not raw) goat meats. Goats are just a little bit more agile than sheep for the ripply landscape here, and don't graze, they nibble at everything leafy. So I can probably also experiment with planting things that add something to the quality of the milk. Like, I'm thinking that they probably would pass through a lot of the good stuff in Olive leaves, and not to mention once the trees get big enough, they produce olives and the oil is magic stuff too.
Richat is interesting but randall makes a good case that it’s a volcanic formation of some kind, if i am remembering correctly.
Yea, very solid case. We need a zap-funded research expedition to find out!
https://damus.io/note1pgm9du5ehwsl9as4k848tng5ugmnktdz8nrl7kv80dygzgyjw8mszhp9kt
I feel there's more to the richat though, humans occupy volcanic spots all the time, the structure beeing volcanic in nature does not invalidate that humans can't use it and build cities on top of it, like in every island out there today... also, no one really knows for sure what the pillars of hercules / heracles were and we suppose it's the Strait of Gibraltar, but in reality could be some place else.
The surrounding clues was most interesting to me: atlas mountains, most gold in the world came from that area, plato describing the same rock colors, shells and salt around it. They should excavate both spots, or even off the coast if it all got washed away in a flood.
Have you read The Apocalypse of Yajknavalkya? They describe (with lots of annotations and references) a meteor storm scenario around 15000 years ago that led to a massive amount of steam and dust and around 1200 years of extreme cold and then another 1200 years of relative cold, and this all coincides with "the stone age".
There's so much they reference in there it's ridiculous. I was referred to it by Mark Jeftovich, the Bombthrower former shitcoiner EasyDNS now bitcoiner guy, who had one of his other bloggers publish an excerpt from it about the pizzagate and related things.
As for "they" should do anything. The Bulgarian government forbade further excavation in the oldest known continuously occupied human settlement, Plovdiv, formerly known as Phillipopolis. And the most ancient gold artifacts were found in Varna. The whispers I picked up on in my time living in Bulgaria were pretty interesting, as was my intuition about the place. I never saw such a big mountain as Rila, also, it was so big as I rode in a car towards Blagoevgrad I had one of those trippy movie moments where the sheer scale of the mountain was like it smacked me in the face.
Btw, the evidence of Plovdiv goes back to 6500 years ago. And there is also the Magura Caves and honestly, you have to see the massive stone structures around Belogradchik. IMO it's artificial stone, made by the Atlanteans. I've seen close up photos of it and there was clearly aggregation of old, rounded river stone in the middle of supposedly granite rock formations! Never got the chance to actually see it for myself apart from on the train to Vidim tho.
Magura Caves seem like another underground bunker carved for protection during the younger dryas?
Possibly, but it is the most ancient cave paintings yet found. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magura_Cave#Paintings 8000-10000 years ago.
The area that these things were found is nearby the Danube river and rivers like her are ancient, far more than 10,000 years old. The danube follows a very long, very flat path out to the black sea and it is unlikely anything near it is recent vulcanism, so the caves could well be excavated by humans, originally, or at least, one of the refuges after they received the warning to hide there by the "angels".
We have cave paintings that go back 70k years ago, but they are abstract.
As the ice on North America and Europe melted and dumped into the oceans, those two landmasses then rose up.
My house where I live is still actually rising above sea level today by approx 20mm/yr, even as the global sea level rises due to climate change.
… and my house is 1/2 mile from the beach.
We live on a very dynamic planet.
This is unlikely, IMO. There isn't old enough volcanoes in the Atlantic to have eroded right down to a flat, variably soft stone profile like Richat anywhere in the Atlantic.
Maderia is pretty young, Cabo Verde is a bit older, the Azores are probably the oldest but that's it for the atlantic. The volcano that created the Richat structure is millions of years old, most probably, and was probably bigger than Olypmus Mons.