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The specifics of the place. Because when passing the segment between 2 ridges of stone melts, you need to look both to the right and to the left of the path, so first we will give what we see to the left, and then what we see to the right. In this case, of course, there is no question of examining, say, left-right for 3 km. It is important for us, in principle, to show what is what - and what we are looking for!
So we left the cleft leading from the square with the Facade with Colonies:
And let's see what's on the expansion between the 2 ridges of rock melts. Naturally, we will have something to look at both on the left and right sides of the footpath along which the turlo walks. There is a huge stone melt on the left side. We'll just select the levels separated by straight horizontal seams. We will not draw vertical stripes so as not to obscure the pictures; it can be seen that the correct, albeit twisted, vertical seams are also present, and in the lower level there are patterns in general, and in the lower right corner you can see the corner of the Amphitheater:
Here we will see the amphitheater better. The seam between the levels of the megaliths is clearly in sight:
Promotional video:
We are now using someone else's photo to show this huge rock melt at the top. You don't even need to draw anything into squares. So it is perfectly visible that it was a structure made of cubes, heavily melted on top and crushed by some monstrous force!
We'll also give someone else's photo, because we don't have the opportunity to shoot from a height. This photo above shows the preserved corner of the skyscraper that stood here.
And here are the correct cubes of the destroyed structure:
And now we will direct the lens to the most characteristic area of the same giant melt. We won't even cross out into squares. So everything is nowhere clearer! It was a giant structure (foundation) that was exposed to OVER-temperature, causing the top to melt and the bottom to bulge. At the bottom there are 2 ornaments with holes. We believe that these are later ornaments, such as facades, of a memorial nature. Technically, these facades are absolutely lower than the gigantic buildings that stood here; we'll see a lot of them around here.
Here we will objectively bring the same place closer. The square striation is visible, although the entire structure has collapsed backwards. And the surface part in many respects simply melted, slipped “like lava”:
Although the term "lava" should be used here with a well-known reservation, because (VIKI) LAVA is a low-temperature plasma, with a temperature of 700 to 1200 degrees! This is nonsense! A steel or even aluminum structure will stand in the lava and will not melt; ceramics or stones - moreover, lava will not take them! And then granite mountains melted! Imagine what the temperature was! 2000 years have passed, and then there is the cruel desert and the melting! Here we will bring the same place even closer - the correct striation heaped back is visible perfectly, we ourselves do not need to strike it on purpose:
Here's another snapshot of this giant melt taken by us from the footpath:
But this is from the same place - zoomed in by the lens.
As you can see, these holes were wound at a completely different time! These holes have nothing to do with these giant megalithic structures! These holes could have been made by the Turks when this place was under the Ottoman Empire. In Turkey itself, there are many of these; or a little earlier under the Byzantine Empire in the 1st millennium AD. But GRANITE MEGALITES are the remains of ANTIQUE MEGAPOLIS!
Now we will highlight a couple more pictures from this melt! Well, here is a clear correct connection of slightly flattened megaliths:
How not to recall the expression that “nature does not shit with bricks,” but with regular megaliths - and even more so! This same place is closer. There is no need to emphasize anything here! All this was once fitted by mechanisms:
And what are the areas of frozen granite melts! We filmed here:
So, we looked at the stone melts on the left side of the path, as if we were going to the second ridge of melts. Now we will see what we have on the right side. In the photo, this is on the left side:
So we go - and on the right side we have this huge oplavin:
Oplav is wild!
Above, as you can see, it is all melted, and below there are some holes, facades, straight lines that need to be dealt with. Here it is important to separate the straight lines of giant megaliths, which were of the initial pre-thermonuclear time of construction, and post-thermonuclear memorial facades, and holes from the activities of people of the last millennium. Let's bring this giant melt closer. Look how many memorials are cut below! This melting is a huge mass grave!
Well, this is already an obvious stone carving. This has nothing to do with the original masonry of megaliths here:
Highly melted melt! Everything above this seam is strongly melted, and below this seam is already a secondary and later stone carving:
But all the same, the original monolithic masonry appears:
And when we passed this turn of the footpath and this float remained on our right:
We go out on a straight path right up to the last ridge of oplavs! In this way:
That is, we have entered this straight path, abutting the next ridge of fusion!
And here's another photo of someone else:
And the fact that this ridge of melts is composed of regular megaliths can be seen even from afar. Yes, it is heavily melted from above, it is a former megalithic masonry - this is obvious and you don't even need to scratch it out - the squaring is obvious here:
And closer:
Well! Actually, we need to rest a little in the shade of the restaurant oasis, and crawl up the ridge!
Here you will be subjected to extortion by the local Arabs attacking you with offers to give you a ride on a donkey at a high price. Disagree! Otherwise, you will frantically hug the donkey by the neck for the rest of the road and you will not see anything. You are walking! Why do you need to quickly climb somewhere? You came to watch, so go quietly and look around!
Read the continuation here.