Buildings Covered With Soil. Part 14 - Alternative View

Buildings Covered With Soil. Part 14 - Alternative View
Buildings Covered With Soil. Part 14 - Alternative View

Video: Buildings Covered With Soil. Part 14 - Alternative View

Video: Buildings Covered With Soil. Part 14 - Alternative View
Video: DIGGING A SECRET TUNNEL Part 2 2024, May
Anonim

- Part 1 - Part 2 - Part 3 - Part 4 - Part 5 - Part 6 - Part 7 - Part 8 - Part 9 - Part 10 - Part 11 - Part 12 - Part 13 -

moiperiskop made his observations on the topic "Buildings covered with soil":

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Church of the Intercession (Podil, at the foot of Andreevsky Spusk). So, in his opinion, one of the temples should look like. Indeed, the first floor (photo on the left) is somehow cut.

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The bell tower with the temple of Simeon the Stylite of the Church of St. Nicholas the Good 1716.

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It has been dug out and all the same it seems that it is not completely.

Promotional video:

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There is one observation. The hem is located at the foot of the hills and landslides could come from there. But then the question is: what kind of hills and what kind of showers led to this?

Further according to Andreevsky:

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And at the highest point - from above, at the end of the building, the windows completely sank.

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The author, climbing up the Andreevsky, on Bolshaya Zhitomirskaya Street, I find a building with sunken windows. The plate dates back to the 20th century. In the courtyard above each entrance there are different dates: 1905 and 1908, but they may well be built on the old foundation.

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st. Small basement. The same picture. Antique house with ridiculous ground windows.

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The analogy of bringing in cities with clay with volcanic ash during an eruption.

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There was such a settlement in the crater of a volcano. Iceland. Fishing village Vestmannaeyjar a year before the eruption.

At approximately 1:55 am local time on January 23, 1973. one kilometer from the center of Heimaey, a small 300-meter fault appeared, which in a matter of hours increased to 2 km and crossed the island from one coast to the other. In the blink of an eye, lava fountains spurted along the entire length of the fault, rising to a height of 50 to 150 meters. A few hours later, the main activity of the volcano was concentrated in one epicenter, located near the eastern outskirts of the city.

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After the eruption, all houses were covered with ash:

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The analogy with the listed first floors of buildings is obvious. The only difference is that there is volcanic ash. And in the cities - clay.

Could there be clay of volcanic origin? Volcanoes not in the classical sense, but some kind of gas and mud, for example? With powerful degassing, for example? Could such volcanoes emit erosion products when gases and water escaped? I think this version has the right for discussion. Otherwise, how to explain the finding of volcanic ash in layers of clay found during excavations in Kostenki:

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Kostenki. The layers of clay contain layers of volcanic ash. Add showers - here are mudflows, including from the hills.

The official dating of these layers with volcanic ash is 35 thousand years. The date is very close to the date of the eruption of the supervolcano Campi Flegrei on the Apennine Peninsula (modern Italy).

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The eruption of the Campi Phlegrei volcano 39 thousand years ago (the largest eruption in this region for 200 thousand years) is associated with the death and disappearance of the Neanderthals. Literally the day before these lines were written, the History channel came across a report of Italian researchers who showed the same layers of clay and ash in the sections of the hill (as in Kostenki) and claimed that these were deposits from the Campi Flegrei eruption.

This supervolcano began to wake up. If so, then he could have spewed ash or clay earlier. Let's say at the beginning of the 19th century. And a year without summer is his fault. And if so, then the brought cities and buildings are also a consequence of these eruptions.

The only question is why are they not documented?

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General scheme of the caldera.

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The last documented powerful eruption occurred in 1538.

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More than 20 supervolcanoes officially exist on Earth. The most famous is in Yellowstone National Park, USA. The nature of the eruptions is not clear. How this can happen - people in the street are not told. Yes, and whether the volcanologists themselves do not imagine it.

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Maybe these craters in Africa (1 to 7 km in diameter) were also sources of clay, sand, water, gases.

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It is their tectonic origin that confirms the cone of the volcano inside.

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But I digress, trying to find analogies. Back to the facts:

Another unusual soil entry fact: Underground roads in France.

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They look like trenches left over from the war, or tunnels that run through forests. These ancient roads, called Holloways, stretch across Europe.

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The impression is that the roads were covered with soil, and they were cleared as if from snow …

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Paved Holloways near Washford, West Somerset, England.

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Screen comment:

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The comment of one of the readers of the magazine, writes Tatyana Matnina:

“On average in Krasnoyarsk, the radioactivity of the soil is 2.5 times higher than the world average, and in some places - 5-6 times.” I got caught the other day. To the question, about the years of our city. And on the plans that I considered at one time there is a deviation from the north, the streets should be directed at it - by 8-10 degrees. Besides. The very first regular plans before 1795 had a completely different direction of the axes … Moreover, when the plans are superimposed, everything coincides, starting with the Gostinny Dvor, but the directions are different. Maybe there is a trace of a shift in the axes and the Great War - the destruction of the city?

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A memory remained in the child's memory. I just don’t remember exactly - it was the foundation pit of a house opposite the Opera House or under the theater itself, but in this foundation pit, WHOLE covered with earth, was the frame of a wooden house. Round ones are good logs. In excellent condition. I remember them exactly. It was I who looked through your articles yesterday on the bombarded cities.

My childhood memory keeps a slide of round logs … Approximately the same ones that have survived, the house on Kopylova, where like a new park, is living out its last days … THAT'S THE SAME KIND … And quite deep … from the surface of the day … I can't say for sure, because the measurements of an adult and the child are quite different. However, children's memory is not descriptive, but photographic … It remains in the memory that the working people were in the pit, and at least above them was in their height. That is, at least 2 meters. Or maybe three. I cannot see the composition of the earth “on the slide”. I remember the color of the logs - dark brown. Into the blackness. But charred is it or just the color of time - I don't remember … But this is - of course - fragile evidence. You can't get them to the point … And the workers, that then such pits were dug in the center, and for certain, they found something similar repeatedly, also, probablycan not be found … If they are alive, then they are under 90 ….

The comment reminded me of this photo from a quarry near Minusinsk:

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An example from the Krasnoyarsk Territory, Yeniseisk:

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What is this strange layer of pure clay without layers? What caused it?

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Until Catherine's times - 5 meters deep! Phrase from the video.

Houses from the wood of the ship! Was it that there were no trees in this taiga part of Siberia?

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Found a backfilled well.

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Kitay-Gorod Wall in Moscow. Why is the wall so low? Is it listed or such a project? If the latter, then its fortification properties are very low.

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Low arched walls. Part of the wall was demolished in 1934.

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Or should the arches be like this in height?

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A selection of videos on the topic:

What does Petrovsky Boulevard remember after the "Crimean War"? Moscow is antediluvian. 19th century.

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Zaraisk Kremlin: a very cultural layer.

This video shows that all the destruction was attributed to the Tatar-Mongol:

Continued: Part 15