Ancient Civilizations

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Chukzombi

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Do the Richat Structure videos address the fact that it's on top of a mountain, or do they assume it's sea level as usual?
The Tamanrasset is thought to have flowed across the Sahara in ancient times from sources in the southern Atlas mountains and Hoggar highlands in what is now Algeria.[3]

It is thought the river fed into the Cap Timiris Canyon, located off the coast of Mauritania; the canyon is located in waters three kilometres deep and is 2.5km wide in places.[7][3]

The presence of the river is thought to have had wide-ranging implications for human migration from Central Africa to the Middle East, Europe, and Asia. Previously, the inhospitable Sahara desert was believed to have made a western route for migrating to Europe unviable.[8][9][10][11]

Researchers believe that the ancient river became active during the African Humid Period, climate oscillations caused by the precession of the Earth’s rotation.[4]

The palaeoriver was discovered using a Japanese orbital satellite system called Phased Array type L-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (PALSAR). Using microwave sensing, PALSAR can see below Saharan sands and detect the fossil water still present.[5]

The Tamanrasset has been noted as a possible location for an ancient Saharan civilization based solely on comparisons with similar contemporary river systems and their associated civilizations. [12] The existence and location of the Tamanrasset River was only confirmed by scientists in 2015, although an expedition looking for oil found the Cap Timiris Canyon in 2003 which was likely formed by the flow of the sediment-laden freshwater of this river system.[13][14] Currently no evidence exists of any former civilization or agricultural community which dates to the time in which the river was present.
Figure_1._Tamanrasset_River._Hydrological_context_of_Africa.jpg
 
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Chris

Potato del Grande
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The Tamanrasset is thought to have flowed across the Sahara in ancient times from sources in the southern Atlas mountains and Hoggar highlands in what is now Algeria.[3]

It is thought the river fed into the Cap Timiris Canyon, located off the coast of Mauritania; the canyon is located in waters three kilometres deep and is 2.5km wide in places.[7][3]

The presence of the river is thought to have had wide-ranging implications for human migration from Central Africa to the Middle East, Europe, and Asia. Previously, the inhospitable Sahara desert was believed to have made a western route for migrating to Europe unviable.[8][9][10][11]

Researchers believe that the ancient river became active during the African Humid Period, climate oscillations caused by the precession of the Earth’s rotation.[4]

The palaeoriver was discovered using a Japanese orbital satellite system called Phased Array type L-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (PALSAR). Using microwave sensing, PALSAR can see below Saharan sands and detect the fossil water still present.[5]

The Tamanrasset has been noted as a possible location for an ancient Saharan civilization based solely on comparisons with similar contemporary river systems and their associated civilizations. [12] The existence and location of the Tamanrasset River was only confirmed by scientists in 2015, although an expedition looking for oil found the Cap Timiris Canyon in 2003 which was likely formed by the flow of the sediment-laden freshwater of this river system.[13][14] Currently no evidence exists of any former civilization or agricultural community which dates to the time in which the river was present.
Figure_1._Tamanrasset_River._Hydrological_context_of_Africa.jpg
Did it flow up the mountain and down the other side?
 

Chukzombi

Millie's Staff Member
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Did it flow up the mountain and down the other side?
seriously though. watch the series finale of The Grand Tour. Mauritania is a flat motherfucker with very tall peaks surrounding it. they're flood plains that look very much how the Grand Canyon looks over here as if a giant flow of water carved out the area. its not mountains.
 

Loser Araysar

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If they can find stone tool evidence at Richat from 100,000 years ago why cant they find evidence of Atlantis in the same place?
 

Chukzombi

Millie's Staff Member
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that Grand Tour in Mauritania episode is pretty cool. hard to believe Clarkson is only ten years older than me. holy shit he looks old.
place is being overtaken by the sand and anything that could be found would be reburied very quickly.
at 1h 12 or 13 minutes, Clarkson mentions the Richat and that it is believed to be the lost city of Atlantis.
at 1h 18 minutes they cant find the eye (Richat) after they went looking for it. both May and Clarkson give up thinking it didnt exist. then the camera pulls up and up and up and up and up and up. showing via satellite that they are exactly dead center of it because its that big.

pretty fucking awesome.
 
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Tholan

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Guys who construct theories about giants, extraterrestrials or advanced ancient civilisations every time a stone has a right angle or a geological structure is a bit unusual remind me of those girls who, as soon as they see a lens flare on a Facebook photo, make a comment like "ooh a forest fairy visited you !"
 

Chukzombi

Millie's Staff Member
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Seems to be a pretty standard defensive point for some Indians. Run there to hide when the other clans come a scalping.
run there? the rock climber guy couldnt figure out how to get to that particular ruin. 55 feet up with sheer rockface all around.
 

TJT

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run there? the rock climber guy couldnt figure out how to get to that particular ruin. 55 feet up with sheer rockface all around.
That guy, for some reason, though of "huge ladders" but didn't think of rope.
 

Chukzombi

Millie's Staff Member
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That guy, for some reason, though of "huge ladders" but didn't think of rope.
i guess because the structure is at least 800-1000 years old he assumed they didnt have rope in that environment. he mentions it, but dismisses it.
 

Chris

Potato del Grande
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I witness some mystery rock nodules myself on the gateway to the Acropolis in Athens:

20240330_122649.jpg


Tour guide said they were handles used to transport the rocks, Ancient Aliens thinks they are a product of ancient high technology where the rocks are softened by acoustic didgeridoos and laid down like wet cement where they harden.
 

Daidraco

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I witness some mystery rock nodules myself on the gateway to the Acropolis in Athens:

View attachment 522328

Tour guide said they were handles used to transport the rocks, Ancient Aliens thinks they are a product of ancient high technology where the rocks are softened by acoustic didgeridoos and laid down like wet cement where they harden.
Was that just an every day hole in the wall made from deterioration? Or a canon ball? Curious if that was brought up with any significance since you're there, if Im understanding Ossoi's thread any.