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  1. reverendALC

    Hydrophilacium Subterranean Pools: South America and Africa

    The African aquifer seems to coincide with the Sea of Uniamesi (unyamwezi). Another fruitless fantasy about the source of the Nile. also a rigorous search of precipuum finds Gnathophyllum precipuum or Hawaiian cave shrimp. Emphasis on cave?
  2. reverendALC

    Area 51 a.k.a. Totonteac: the Seventh City of Cibola?

    Ooh, sounding like plasma bubbles on the moon… a man after my own heart. I don’t necessarily discount the idea, but I do have some bones to pick with the supposition: a bubble wouldn’t leave enormous mounds of displaced earth, unless the bubble formed atop an existing hill (at least I don’t...
  3. reverendALC

    Area 51 a.k.a. Totonteac: the Seventh City of Cibola?

    There’s an interesting tangent here… something I posited during my previous rant about Newport Dunes. After staring at grid cities for countless lengths of time, you start to recognize congruent/similar patterning. They’re like snowflakes, no two alike, however they’ve got recurring themes and...
  4. reverendALC

    American Chestnut Trees: Natural Extinction, or Victims of Bioweaponry?

    Maybe we’re looking through the wrong end of the telescope here. Maybe it’s not the elm or the beech or the chestnut tree. Maybe it’s “trees” that they’re after, and these trees are just the low hanging fruit? sustainable farming has been replaced with monocropping, which is next to...
  5. reverendALC

    Area 51 a.k.a. Totonteac: the Seventh City of Cibola?

    If there was a great civilization there, and there was some grand elimination event… perhaps some enormous bomb turned the Midwest into the barren wasteland that it is? the melted rocks are ground zero here: Pahvant Butte. It’s a dormant volcano, which suspiciously resembles a blast crater...
  6. reverendALC

    Chronology: how old is America?

    I’ve read this thread several times, it’s great, and it’s been in the back of my mind. One of my hobbies is guns, and I happened to snag a nice Turkish Mauser last weekend. The history of this particular karabiner dates back to the late 1800s, and they’ve been chambered in many different sizes...
  7. reverendALC

    Area 51 a.k.a. Totonteac: the Seventh City of Cibola?

    exploring Utah, central to all of the grids and geoglyphs plotted… the earth is inhospitable. There’s literally nothing resembling life or civilization, but there are some interesting geographical conditions. it sort of looks like everything melted: and then I found this place: this is lava...
  8. reverendALC

    19th Century Lightships: What was their Light Source?

    I saw once a video on YT about ancient lights and lighthouses. As much as I would have to copy/paste from this article, it would feel like plagiarism, so please have a skim: Is Mercury Magnetic? - Techiescientist Reading through this article, it will lay the foundation for a viable...
  9. reverendALC

    American Chestnut Trees: Natural Extinction, or Victims of Bioweaponry?

    I’ve been thinking on this for a few days now, but I can’t seem to formulate any sort of hypothesis. Nothing specific anyway. I did find an interesting new blithe; beech leaf disease apparently chestnut trees are in the same family: chestnut, (genus Castanea), genus of seven species of...
  10. reverendALC

    Area 51 a.k.a. Totonteac: the Seventh City of Cibola?

    Indeed interesting, but they seem decidedly different to me. The grids are insanely accurate and precise, mathematical and geographical accomplishments of enormous scale. while those are also at a respectable scale, they resemble the doodles of small children to me. I wouldn’t imagine somebody...
  11. reverendALC

    American Chestnut Trees: Natural Extinction, or Victims of Bioweaponry?

    Ok, so what event(s) may be relevant in New York, 1904? This doesn’t seem atmospheric, this presents as a contagion with a ground/patient zero. was it intentional? Or was it a consequence/byproduct of something else? there are plenty of other trees in abundance with similar desirable traits...
  12. reverendALC

    Area 51 a.k.a. Totonteac: the Seventh City of Cibola?

    Just to riff a little longer on California City and the dubbed “geoglyphs” there… apparently there’s an explanation. According to Wikipedia, California city was paved by a land developer who planned on making a city to rival Los Angeles. Embroiled in scandal and fraud, that didn’t pan out...
  13. reverendALC

    American Chestnut Trees: Natural Extinction, or Victims of Bioweaponry?

    If you have a penchant for control, what’s not to hate about a fast growing, edible fruit bearing, multi-purpose tree that could offer clues about your lies of the past?
  14. reverendALC

    Question | Year 2030: what are they hiding?

    I think that maybe all of this celestial stuff they talk about… might be false context to confirm whatever falsehoods are espoused about our current situation. I’m not saying I don’t believe we’re on a globe earth/planet… but if we weren’t, it would be way easier to believe we were if we...
  15. reverendALC

    Question | Year 2030: what are they hiding?

    We feign an understanding of the universe… we talk about stars and galaxies and black holes and supernovas… but we can’t even offer non-composite photos of the earth we actually live on. In some people’s eyes, that greatly diminishes the value and/or credibility of talk about things so far...
  16. reverendALC

    Our civilization did not build Titanic, Olympic or Britannic. Theirs did. Was it the Tartarian one?

    My quotes are all sourced via the hyperlinks for those with interest. I have added the picture and illustration sources for your corroborating pleasure. cheers
  17. reverendALC

    Our civilization did not build Titanic, Olympic or Britannic. Theirs did. Was it the Tartarian one?

    Air and water are incredibly similar in terms of dynamics. Obviously drag in water is far greater than air, but my hand held flat and perpendicular to motion through the air creates more drag in both air and water, opposed to my hand open and facing down, which slices through air and water much...
  18. reverendALC

    Our civilization did not build Titanic, Olympic or Britannic. Theirs did. Was it the Tartarian one?

    In honor of Occam’s razor, I’d like to explore the assumptions involved in both scenarios: flush rivets: They were available at the time In their infancy, they were able to be 100% obfuscated by a coating The dynamic drag of rivet heads was of dire importance, however the uneven panel lapping...
  19. reverendALC

    Our civilization did not build Titanic, Olympic or Britannic. Theirs did. Was it the Tartarian one?

    I don’t know enough about engineering and aero/hydro dynamics to mathenarucalyargue (mathematically argue lol) your point: “Small raised parts of hulls create exponentially more drag than large raised parts” but I can say, my gut disagrees with that statement. What I do know tells me this: a...
  20. reverendALC

    Area 51 a.k.a. Totonteac: the Seventh City of Cibola?

    @Investigator I've known of burning man, but never went or cared much. I found that pattern, ran it through google lens, and discovered that is where burning man is held. the grid there is a feat of engineering I would assume far beyond the reach of those involved in the drug/sex/music fest...
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