Footprints Of The Gods: The Secret Of The Japanese Megalith Ishi-no-Hoden - Alternative View

Footprints Of The Gods: The Secret Of The Japanese Megalith Ishi-no-Hoden - Alternative View
Footprints Of The Gods: The Secret Of The Japanese Megalith Ishi-no-Hoden - Alternative View

Video: Footprints Of The Gods: The Secret Of The Japanese Megalith Ishi-no-Hoden - Alternative View

Video: Footprints Of The Gods: The Secret Of The Japanese Megalith Ishi-no-Hoden - Alternative View
Video: The most unknown megalith in Japan [ Ishi no Hoden ] 2024, May
Anonim

A hundred kilometers west of Asuka Park, near the town of Takasago, there is an object that is a megalith attached to a rock with dimensions of 5.7x6.4x7.2 meters and weighing about 500-600 tons. Ishi-no-Hoden ("Soaring Stone") - this is the name of this monolith, a kind of "semi-finished product", that is, a block that remains at the place of its manufacture and has clear signs that it (for some reason unknown to us) was not completed to the end …

One of the vertical surfaces has a truncated prism-shaped protrusion - the result is a stable feeling that the object is lying on its side. This position "on the side" seems strange only at first glance. The fact is that Ishi-no-Hoden was made quite simply - on the edge of the rock mass around a large piece of the mountain, a rock was chosen, and this piece of the mountain itself was given the non-trivial geometric shape described above.

At the same time, the position of Ishi-no-Hoden "on its side" turns out to be just such, in which it was possible, on the one hand, to guarantee the desired shape of the object, and on the other hand, to minimize labor costs for excavating excess rock around it. It is the minimization of costs and external simplicity that characterize the "technologies of the gods" that we have observed in many parts of the world - Egypt, South America, etc.

But at the same time, the volume of removed rock is about 400 cubic meters and weighing about 1000 tons (but rather more).

The grooves on the side surfaces are somewhat similar to technical details along which something had to move. Or vice versa: the stone itself had to move along some mating parts in an even larger structure.

It can also be suggested that this monolith was supposed to serve only as one of the pillars of some huge structure.

In any case, this is absolutely definitely not a "stone tomb", as it usually follows from the official version.

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The studies conducted by the Japanese (including ultrasound methods), in fact, did not give results. The block could not be dated, no trace of a tool was found with which to process it.

Most likely, Ishi-no-Hoden was for a long time covered with rubble and debris that had once collapsed from the top of the mountain, possibly during some kind of earthquake.

This megalith and the technology of its manufacture are now a secret for scientists, which they try not to remember once again.

According to local legend, the creation of Ishi-no-Hoden is attributed to the "gods" - Oo-kuninushi-no kami (God-Patron of the Great Country) and Sukuna-bikona-no kami (God-Kid).

Let's watch a very interesting video dedicated to Japanese megaliths: