Who Built The Colosseum? - Alternative View

Who Built The Colosseum? - Alternative View
Who Built The Colosseum? - Alternative View

Video: Who Built The Colosseum? - Alternative View

Video: Who Built The Colosseum? - Alternative View
Video: 12. The Creation of an Icon: The Colosseum and Contemporary Architecture in Rome 2024, May
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History textbooks say that the Colosseum in Rome was built by the Romans, as well as the city of the Sun (the megalithic complex in Baalbek). The literature states that the Colosseum was built of bricks and concrete and has a mass of over 600,000 tons. More than 100,000 cubic meters of travertine (limestone tuff) were used for the cladding of the building.

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The close-up shows the joints between the blocks characteristic of megalithic structures. It clearly follows from this that the Colosseum is a megalithic complex made of blocks carved in quarries.

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Careful research has shown that the vaulted galleries are also not made of concrete.

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Are all megalithic structures on Earth not the work of our civilization? Why was the Colosseum built in particular?

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Quote: Rome was supplied with fresh water from the mountains through an extensive system of aqueducts. Could this system provide a million liters of water per hour to fill the Colosseum overnight? Today, only one aqueduct has survived in Rome, which supplies water to the famous Trevi Fountain. Two thousand years ago there were eleven such aqueducts. Now water flows through the aqueduct at a speed of three meters per second. This is enough to fill the Colosseum arena (which is located just 150 meters from the aqueduct) with water in six to seven hours, without disrupting the city's water supply. Scientists, however, still do not know the answer to the question of where the Romans poured 4.5 million liters of water after Naumachia. End of quote.

Spring water, which was supplied through aqueducts (also megalithic structures), simply evaporated in this giant evaporator. This is where it went … By the way, the elliptical shape of the Colosseum is a typical form of a dielectric resonator, or rather a source of energy, in which the number of nodes of a standing wave was equal to the number of arches located in a circle, i.e. 80. Travertine is a suitable dielectric for the decameter range. It is the travertine blocks that form the skin layer, transforming the entire megalithic complex into an ideal resonant system. The nodes and antinodes of standing waves in the Colosseum are staggered. The power of the electromagnetic field, extracted from the ether, was transmitted to the area filled with spring water through a stepped dielectric waveguide, similar to the stands for spectators. In the arena of the Colosseum, a show was indeed unfolding. The main characters were electromagnetic waves and boiling spring water. To find out what precious metal the aliens mined from it, you need to take a sample of this water and conduct a mass spectral analysis.