Buildings Covered With Soil. Part 18 - Alternative View

Buildings Covered With Soil. Part 18 - Alternative View
Buildings Covered With Soil. Part 18 - Alternative View

Video: Buildings Covered With Soil. Part 18 - Alternative View

Video: Buildings Covered With Soil. Part 18 - Alternative View
Video: Building Africa's City in the Sea 2024, June
Anonim

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Another excavation, facts asking all the same questions: what are the reasons for such a picture in old buildings?

For new supporters of official explanations, I recommend reading this article first: "Buildings covered with soil. Objections and explanations". Think and only then write new versions and their derivatives. Everything is discussed, but I don't want to repeat myself in the answers every time

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In Omsk, a profound reconstruction of Lenin Street has been going on for many years. All those interested in this topic remember the Vrubel Museum (Lenin st., 3). Rather, the reconstruction of this building and the openings of windows and doors that opened from the ground (clay). Here is a new example: the basement of Lenin, 20, Chernavin's house, mid-19th century, was opened.

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Promotional video:

Apparently, at the moment, what is the basement is getting wet and it was decided to waterproof the underground part. But in the past, builders could not predict such that underground brick walls would get wet from moisture.

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The depth is about three meters.

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Old photographs of the building. The windows are now visible in the form of pits.

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The only reasonable answer from an official point of view is to deepen the building below the freezing depth to prevent the foundation from heaving. In Siberia, it is below 2.5m. But in Moscow and St. Petersburg this value is even higher. There would be no more than 2m depth of the basement. Why was it necessary to lower the basement to a depth of 5 meters and below (in the example of the Polytechnic Museum).

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Photo dated 1973 during the construction of Les Halles in Paris. The structure wrapped over the metal scaffolding on the right is the fountain of the Innocents!

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End of "Les Halles" 1969. The market was demolished in 1971 and the foundation pit remained for several years.

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Before the start of construction.

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The cast iron structures of the old halls were demolished and a huge foundation pit was dug to build what would become the central hub of the future RER (Paris New Urban Railroad) transport system.

It was decided to relocate the wholesale market to the suburb of Rungi, in the suburbs of Paris.

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Start of construction.

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Construction from a height.

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It seems to me that this is all ancient Roman. Or antique - as you like.

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The modern look of this place.

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Another fact is that many European cities stand on ancient Roman (antique) buildings destroyed by the catastrophe.

San Lorenzo Maggiore. Antique city under the temple in Naples.

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The existing church was founded by the Franciscan order in 1265.

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Access to the excavation area was opened to visitors in 1992, after 25 years of archaeological work.

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Neapolitan antique market uncovered by excavations under the church.

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Excavation of the city of Ebla.

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Ebla is an ancient city in Syria. The name of the open city became known only in 1968, when archaeologists found a fragment of a broken sacrificial statue dedicated to the goddess Ishtar. The inscription was carved on the statue: "From Ibbat Lin, son of Igrish Khep, king of Ebla …"

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Huge strata of clay. Below them are the ruins of the city.

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Just don't write that these are cultural layers …

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Reconstructors are making a remake - they have plastered and painted the walls. Was she like that? Or do archaeologists want to see that way?

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Let's go back to the underground walls of the Polytechnic Museum in Moscow. A more detailed analysis of what was there in the pit:

Official and important information inside the video from the director of the museum on Lubyanka - Yulia Shakhnovskaya: "… we thought that the foundation was 4 meters under the building, but in some places it was 18 meters." And this is confirmed in this video by filming and measuring amateurs inside the museum's basements.

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Analogies from A. Kungurov, explaining the strangeness of this picture:

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I recommend watching this video: “San Francisco is a city on ships. Another mystery of the 19th century.

You can imagine the nonsense of the official version: that in order to expand the territory of the city, thousands of ships were flooded and filled up! The ship is a fortune at that time (yes, and now). It can be overtaken and sold wherever you need it. Yes, this requires a team of sailors. But still … Was there a surplus of ships in the United States at that time? But this is "half the trouble", as they say in this question. How much soil do you need to transfer to fill up the bay with ships? Try to count!

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Buildings with stone semi-basements or first floors and wooden floors.

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An example of a landslide in China. I do not exclude that such quicksands could have brought in many cities.

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Hidden archeology. What have you dug up in Ostankino?

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A selection of buildings from Samara:

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The excavated mound in Essentuki.

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The cemetery of the Maikop culture Kurgan on the northern outskirts of Yessentuki, where excavations have recently begun, is a man-made hill 7 meters high and about 80 in diameter, of which about 50 meters have survived.

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It seems that at one time there was a building on the hill, which was destroyed into stones. Wave water hammer? Explosion? What versions will there be?

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Continued: Part 19