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Discovering The World’s Most Mysterious Places

by CHAN LEE PENG on 31/12/07 at 10:04 am

These places accommodate some miraculous and natural superpowers that man could not solve their mystery clues even with the most advance devices human had made so far. Their myths and legendary rumors remain unknown and mysterious to the outside world.

Canada Niagara Falls is the world’s most mysterious places in the world. Niagara Falls constitutes a part of Canada and the border of United States, the New York State and Ontario, Canada, separating from the Niagara River by flowing northward from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario with a total length of nearly 30 miles. Located in the north, covering an area of 250,000 square miles, Niagara Falls is a smooth exit to these lakes. Its maximum water flow reaches 250,000 cubic feet per second. Niagara Falls is indeed very awesome.

This Geysering is a magical spring found in the upper part of the Yarlung Zangbo River in Tibet, China. The spring bursts out in a short while and stops for a while before following by other bursts. The burst goes on, stops and goes on. In other words, its eruption cycle is continuous for a few minutes, auto stop after a few dozen minutes; and followed by another burst and so forth. It bursts like an eruption with a huge, shocked sound. It vents out some high temperature steam from the mouth of the spring. The spring then expands immediately into one to two meters in diameter, and rushes out as water column as high as 20m into the sky. In addition to China’s Geysering, in the place near Reykjavik, capital of Iceland, the Geysering is renowned in the world with its diameter of 20m. When there is drizzling rain, this water column can even soar up as high as 70m into the sky.

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50 Comments

Judy Sheldon-Walker

Dec 31st, 2007

Thank you for allowing me to see some of the world’s greatest wonders with you. It was an awesome journey, and it’s right here, so I can do it again. lol

Jared Stenzel

Dec 31st, 2007

I have always wanted to go out and see some pyramids. Great research.

Liane Schmidt

Dec 31st, 2007

Great, intersting, well written article. Another great piece!

Best wishes.

Sincerely,

-Liane Schmidt.

Tina

Jan 2nd, 2008

I enjoyed this too.

Darlene McFarlane

Jan 9th, 2008

So interesting. I can’t wait for your next article.

ngang

Jan 28th, 2008

wow…
This sure are the most mysterious place in the World…

khish

Feb 5th, 2008

co cocooooool . hey thanks , i wanna travel china cuz i’m near .everything seems wonderful …

Kianna

Mar 5th, 2008

Hey i luv scary places and this is soo cool i just want more

Anji

Mar 14th, 2008

WOW.That place sure is scary.

owais

Mar 25th, 2008

its good but needs more info and pictures

Vishesh

Apr 10th, 2008

I want to know more about the bermuda triangle man. Drives me Insane when i think about it,

tuhin

May 8th, 2008

i want to know about bermuda triangle.

NAVIN

Jun 10th, 2008

PLEASE BE MORE BRIEF . IT IS REALLY INTERESTING. I WANT TO KNOW MORE ABOUT THE BERMUDA TRIANGLE

laika from philippines

Jun 28th, 2008

whOa!! i wanna be iN d beRmuda triaNgle!! deVil tRianGle!

Prerna

Jul 5th, 2008

It was really nice!!! waiting for more articles….

shabnam

Jul 12th, 2008

i think its really amazing but there should be more photos.

Indonesia Waldo

Aug 1st, 2008

I think, it was a very nice place but hidden. so we must explore it more and more! I reaally appreciate about that thanks for this web site.

Mayvis

Aug 1st, 2008

Very nice and interesting! Keep it up!!

stacy

Aug 18th, 2008

what about the stone henges? come on now.

michael abraham

Oct 15th, 2008

Wonderful! A very nice facts full of mysteries

Ahmad Muhammad Datti

Oct 28th, 2008

Very informative pls supply more picturese

sayani mukherjee

Nov 19th, 2008

very much enriched with information. but there are many more mysterious places and facts around the world. plz let us know about those all. i want much more information about bermuda triangle. explore the mystery which is undefined.

bugdown

Dec 4th, 2008

it’s very amazing!!!!!!!!!!!!

RANJITH NAIR

Dec 19th, 2008

NICE AND INTERESTING

Palak Shelat

Feb 12th, 2009

it is excellent. good information but if you find anything new then plz let us know about that. and thanks for all material.

Miroslav Provod

Feb 22nd, 2009

Golan Heights

Golan Heights that spread over 1250 square kilometers are an important spring region that supplies 4 states with water. The great presence of static electricity in this region can be deduced from the high number of megalithic structures. A local circular structure of diameter of 159 meters is composed of five concentric circles that are laid out by freely laying stones that all weigh 37 000 tons in total. The heaviest single stones that were used weight about 20 tons. Around this structure there is further 8 500 dolmens and menhirs, the heaviest weighing 50 tons and they are up to 7 meters in height.
Golan Heights may be thought of as a natural laboratory, which can provide us with historical information, in view of research. The static electricity that is almost unknown to present science was crucial for all megalithic structures that were built around the Earth. The new knowledge about properties of static electricity that I describe at http://www.miroslavprovod.com provides more in depth information via continuing research about the mysteries of construction of megalithic structures with combination of different types of rocks, for example Stonehenge, Machu Picchu and many others.
The megalithic structures had all the same function. They accumulated static electricity in their matter, which they gained from various sources. At Golan Heights the sources are mainly underground springs, which provide the megaliths with the static electricity charge.
The “electronics of human body” takes the static electricity from cellular membranes in order to maintain functionality of all organs. The static electricity is continuously supplied by mitochondria. It can be proved by various experiments that the charge of human body can be filled by other means as well – by staying close to greater source of static electricity, which spontaneously gives the energy to cellular membranes. The transfer of energy is rather slow. In case of transfer between a rock and a human body it takes tens of minutes. This shows that the megalithic structures and later also sacral structures were built mainly for health purposes.
Golan Heights are a great hint, which needs greater research to be done. By this I mean gathering of statistical data about all the megaliths in this region, mainly from which types of rocks the individual dolmens were built and their chemical composition. The great ratio of dolmens to the population hints that the reason for building them wasn’t only filling the bodily energy. It may be deduced from the combination of rocks at many of the structures that it mattered through which part of the rock the static electricity went. It’s probable that it was influenced by chemical properties of the rock, which it transferred to the cellular membranes of human body. If the combination of different types of rocks is proved by the dolmens it would logically point out that the reason for building them was curing of various bodily anomalies.
Big groups of megaliths aren’t only at Golan Heights but at various places around the Earth. Further statistical data from other regions would make more believable knowledge not only about history but also about static electricity. From the economic point of view the “re-discovered” energy may bring great motivation to people in many fields.

January 2009-01-06
Miroslav Provod

David

Mar 28th, 2009

Many many more mysterous and intriguing places in Africa

azman

Apr 11th, 2009

this is great truly enjoyable thanks

sarah

May 14th, 2009

i have always aimed to have an co memorable experience in the worlds mysterious places and have had a keen interest in doing so

Md.Firoz Khan

Jul 24th, 2009

Very good collection

ryuuzaki

Aug 6th, 2009

wow i like these articles watsoever
very nice hope to read some more
interesting mystery

Santhosh

Sep 22nd, 2009

Please upload some more pictures. It really drives me crazy go out of this world when i read this. Great

Heaven

Oct 18th, 2009

I am really intrested in these mysterious places since my childhood ‘caz i want to reveal all these mystery infront of the world.Plz add some more secrets on the webpage.As these mystery are very few for me to solve in my life.I need some more tough & interesting task to solve.Thxxxxxxxxx

Sam

Oct 31st, 2009

Dis`s really good…. with sound stuff

SENJAM SHANTIRANI

Nov 27th, 2009

ITS REALLY CAPTIVATING. I AM WAITING FOR DETAILED ARTICLE ON BERMUDA TRIANGLE.

Parash

Jan 12th, 2010

I think moguichang is the best.
Because I knew about the Bermuda Triangle but moguicheng is new to me and it’s very interesting.

Sumeet Chakraborty

Jan 23rd, 2010

Great work!!!!! really loved reading through this article

nerea

Apr 5th, 2010

me cago en tu puta madre

Marie

Aug 21st, 2010

Sataplia cave in Georgia

Sataplia Cave was discovered in 1925. Sataplia is a rather small cave, famous for fine speleothems and the dinosaur footprints nearby. The tour enters the through-cave on one hillside, crosses the hill underground and then goes back on the surface past the dinosaur footprints.This cave is hard to reach and not very much visited by individual travelers. Best is to take a taxi from Kutaisi town square which takes about 45min. The best thing to visit this cave is to book a guided Georgia trip, several tour operators include a day at the Nature Reserve.

The cave is named after Mt. Sataplia (494m asl), an extinct volcano, which is now a Nature Preserve. Thepreserve was intended to protect the five karsts caves of the area and the dinosaur footprints. At the moment there are 200 footprints known, found in two different layers of the Cretaceous limestone. The 30cm long footprints of the lower layer belong to an unknown predator, the 48cm long footprints of the upper layer to an Ornithopod herbivore.

Sataplia State Reserve is a most multifarious and very rare monument. It is of complex character and contains geologic, paleontological, speleological and botanical monuments.

The Sataplia Mountain is famous by its rarest and the most beautiful caves. This cave was firstly noticed by Kutaisi museum employee, pedagogues P. Chabukiani who was able to make organization of this valuable monument protection by the local government, and in 1933, there was found a dinosaur trace.

Sataplia State Nature Reserve was created in 1935 to protect geological, paleontological, speleological and botanical monuments.

The reserve is located in Tskaltubo region in 260 km. from Tbilisi, and in 9 km. from the resort Tskaltubo. Sataplia Nature Reserve represents the south-west edge of Racha gorge, total area of the Nature Reserve is 354 ha., 209 ha from here is covered by forest.
Relief: Sataplia Nature reserve is mountainous, it’s great area is covered by most beautiful and multifarious wood strain Colchian type mixed forests. Mountainous Sataplia is located at 500 m. above sea level. Here we meet 5 carts caves which are famous for their beauty, size and from the scientists’ points of view were taken great consideration. One of these karst cavern length is 600 m., the beauty of this cavern is a cupola-shaped hall, located in 100 m. from the entrance, where the size and beauty of stalactites and stalagmites in the centre astonishes visitors. At the end of the cavern flows the spring which flows into the well, after that the water goes on in narrow impassable clefts and finds its way out in the south slope of the Sataplia Mountain as Oghaskura. There is an extinct volcano crater in the Nature Reserve. The highest top is at 520 m. above sea level.

Climate: subtropical, average early amount of precipitation is 1900 mm., in middle January +4, in August +25.

Flora: the forests of the Nature Reserve are Colchetian type. Here we meet the beech groves with evergreen understory, beech-hornbeam groves with boxwood understory, chestnut forest with yellow azalea and Caucasian understory, alder forests with blackberry understory and others. There are nearly 60 kinds of wood plants. In the Colchian untouched forest woods, are represented maple, beech, Taxus baccata, Kolkhian boxwood, bladder nut , common yew, Caucasian elm, Quercus imeretina Stev., and others. In the Georgian “Red List” are entered: sweet chestnut, Colchian boxwood, Taxus baccata, elm, oak and etc.

Fauna: 17 kinds of mammals, 8 reptiles, 5 amphibious, 65 sorts of birds. The main attractions of the Nature Reserve are footprints of the herbivorous and predatory dinosaurs in the limestone. From mammals here we meet: bear, fox, jackal, lynx, deer, hare, badger, white marten, squirrel and etc. From birds: jay, cuckoo, nightingale, woodcock, oopoe, etc.
Soil: tropical podzolic soils, yellow and red alluvial soils, grey soils.

General Information for tourists:

• Distance from Tbilisi till the Nature Reserve is 260 km; from Kutaisi till the Nature reserve is 10 km.

• Time is 3-4 hours by car. from Tbilisi.

• Sataplia State Nature Reserve was established for the purpose of
protection of Colchian forest, unic spaleological and paleontological monuments. There is a karst cavern and traces of giant reptails – extinct dinosaurs on the therritory.

• From antient time, on the south slope of Sataplia, in the limestone cracks inhabited bees. The local population collected honey here, tha’ts why it was called Sataplia (place of honey).

• One day tour is enough for seeing the sights of Sataplia.

Marie

Aug 21st, 2010

I think it’s interesting information for all, so enjoy :) )

Sataplia cave in Georgia

Sataplia Cave was discovered in 1925. Sataplia is a rather small cave, famous for fine speleothems and the dinosaur footprints nearby. The tour enters the through-cave on one hillside, crosses the hill underground and then goes back on the surface past the dinosaur footprints.This cave is hard to reach and not very much visited by individual travelers. Best is to take a taxi from Kutaisi town square which takes about 45min. The best thing to visit this cave is to book a guided Georgia trip, several tour operators include a day at the Nature Reserve.

The cave is named after Mt. Sataplia (494m asl), an extinct volcano, which is now a Nature Preserve. Thepreserve was intended to protect the five karsts caves of the area and the dinosaur footprints. At the moment there are 200 footprints known, found in two different layers of the Cretaceous limestone. The 30cm long footprints of the lower layer belong to an unknown predator, the 48cm long footprints of the upper layer to an Ornithopod herbivore.

Sataplia State Reserve is a most multifarious and very rare monument. It is of complex character and contains geologic, paleontological, speleological and botanical monuments.

The Sataplia Mountain is famous by its rarest and the most beautiful caves. This cave was firstly noticed by Kutaisi museum employee, pedagogues P. Chabukiani who was able to make organization of this valuable monument protection by the local government, and in 1933, there was found a dinosaur trace.

Sataplia State Nature Reserve was created in 1935 to protect geological, paleontological, speleological and botanical monuments.

The reserve is located in Tskaltubo region in 260 km. from Tbilisi, and in 9 km. from the resort Tskaltubo. Sataplia Nature Reserve represents the south-west edge of Racha gorge, total area of the Nature Reserve is 354 ha., 209 ha from here is covered by forest.
Relief: Sataplia Nature reserve is mountainous, it\’s great area is covered by most beautiful and multifarious wood strain Colchian type mixed forests. Mountainous Sataplia is located at 500 m. above sea level. Here we meet 5 carts caves which are famous for their beauty, size and from the scientists’ points of view were taken great consideration. One of these karst cavern length is 600 m., the beauty of this cavern is a cupola-shaped hall, located in 100 m. from the entrance, where the size and beauty of stalactites and stalagmites in the centre astonishes visitors. At the end of the cavern flows the spring which flows into the well, after that the water goes on in narrow impassable clefts and finds its way out in the south slope of the Sataplia Mountain as Oghaskura. There is an extinct volcano crater in the Nature Reserve. The highest top is at 520 m. above sea level.

Climate: subtropical, average early amount of precipitation is 1900 mm., in middle January 4, in August 25.

Flora: the forests of the Nature Reserve are Colchetian type. Here we meet the beech groves with evergreen understory, beech-hornbeam groves with boxwood understory, chestnut forest with yellow azalea and Caucasian understory, alder forests with blackberry understory and others. There are nearly 60 kinds of wood plants. In the Colchian untouched forest woods, are represented maple, beech, Taxus baccata, Kolkhian boxwood, bladder nut , common yew, Caucasian elm, Quercus imeretina Stev., and others. In the Georgian “Red List” are entered: sweet chestnut, Colchian boxwood, Taxus baccata, elm, oak and etc.

Fauna: 17 kinds of mammals, 8 reptiles, 5 amphibious, 65 sorts of birds. The main attractions of the Nature Reserve are footprints of the herbivorous and predatory dinosaurs in the limestone. From mammals here we meet: bear, fox, jackal, lynx, deer, hare, badger, white marten, squirrel and etc. From birds: jay, cuckoo, nightingale, woodcock, oopoe, etc.
Soil: tropical podzolic soils, yellow and red alluvial soils, grey soils.

General Information for tourists:

• Distance from Tbilisi till the Nature Reserve is 260 km; from Kutaisi till the Nature reserve is 10 km.

• Time is 3-4 hours by car. from Tbilisi.

• Sataplia State Nature Reserve was established for the purpose of
protection of Colchian forest, unic spaleological and paleontological monuments. There is a karst cavern and traces of giant reptails – extinct dinosaurs on the therritory.

• From antient time, on the south slope of Sataplia, in the limestone cracks inhabited bees. The local population collected honey here, tha’ts why it was called Sataplia (place of honey).

Marie

Aug 21st, 2010

I think it\’s interesting information for all, so enjoy :) )

Sataplia cave in Georgia

Sataplia Cave was discovered in 1925. Sataplia is a rather small cave, famous for fine speleothems and the dinosaur footprints nearby. The tour enters the through-cave on one hillside, crosses the hill underground and then goes back on the surface past the dinosaur footprints.This cave is hard to reach and not very much visited by individual travelers. Best is to take a taxi from Kutaisi town square which takes about 45min. The best thing to visit this cave is to book a guided Georgia trip, several tour operators include a day at the Nature Reserve.

The cave is named after Mt. Sataplia (494m asl), an extinct volcano, which is now a Nature Preserve. Thepreserve was intended to protect the five karsts caves of the area and the dinosaur footprints. At the moment there are 200 footprints known, found in two different layers of the Cretaceous limestone. The 30cm long footprints of the lower layer belong to an unknown predator, the 48cm long footprints of the upper layer to an Ornithopod herbivore.

Sataplia State Reserve is a most multifarious and very rare monument. It is of complex character and contains geologic, paleontological, speleological and botanical monuments.

The Sataplia Mountain is famous by its rarest and the most beautiful caves. This cave was firstly noticed by Kutaisi museum employee, pedagogues P. Chabukiani who was able to make organization of this valuable monument protection by the local government, and in 1933, there was found a dinosaur trace.

Sataplia State Nature Reserve was created in 1935 to protect geological, paleontological, speleological and botanical monuments.

The reserve is located in Tskaltubo region in 260 km. from Tbilisi, and in 9 km. from the resort Tskaltubo. Sataplia Nature Reserve represents the south-west edge of Racha gorge, total area of the Nature Reserve is 354 ha., 209 ha from here is covered by forest.
Relief: Sataplia Nature reserve is mountainous, it\\\’s great area is covered by most beautiful and multifarious wood strain Colchian type mixed forests. Mountainous Sataplia is located at 500 m. above sea level. Here we meet 5 carts caves which are famous for their beauty, size and from the scientists’ points of view were taken great consideration. One of these karst cavern length is 600 m., the beauty of this cavern is a cupola-shaped hall, located in 100 m. from the entrance, where the size and beauty of stalactites and stalagmites in the centre astonishes visitors. At the end of the cavern flows the spring which flows into the well, after that the water goes on in narrow impassable clefts and finds its way out in the south slope of the Sataplia Mountain as Oghaskura. There is an extinct volcano crater in the Nature Reserve. The highest top is at 520 m. above sea level.

Climate: subtropical, average early amount of precipitation is 1900 mm., in middle January 4, in August 25.

Flora: the forests of the Nature Reserve are Colchetian type. Here we meet the beech groves with evergreen understory, beech-hornbeam groves with boxwood understory, chestnut forest with yellow azalea and Caucasian understory, alder forests with blackberry understory and others. There are nearly 60 kinds of wood plants. In the Colchian untouched forest woods, are represented maple, beech, Taxus baccata, Kolkhian boxwood, bladder nut , common yew, Caucasian elm, Quercus imeretina Stev., and others. In the Georgian “Red List” are entered: sweet chestnut, Colchian boxwood, Taxus baccata, elm, oak and etc.

Fauna: 17 kinds of mammals, 8 reptiles, 5 amphibious, 65 sorts of birds. The main attractions of the Nature Reserve are footprints of the herbivorous and predatory dinosaurs in the limestone. From mammals here we meet: bear, fox, jackal, lynx, deer, hare, badger, white marten, squirrel and etc. From birds: jay, cuckoo, nightingale, woodcock, oopoe, etc.
Soil: tropical podzolic soils, yellow and red alluvial soils, grey soils.

General Information for tourists:

• Distance from Tbilisi till the Nature Reserve is 260 km; from Kutaisi till the Nature reserve is 10 km.

• Time is 3-4 hours by car. from Tbilisi.

• Sataplia State Nature Reserve was established for the purpose of
protection of Colchian forest, unic spaleological and paleontological monuments. There is a karst cavern and traces of giant reptails – extinct dinosaurs on the therritory.

• From antient time, on the south slope of Sataplia, in the limestone cracks inhabited bees. The local population collected honey here, tha’ts why it was called Sataplia (place of honey).

Marie

Aug 21st, 2010

i like these articles, thanks

Marie

Aug 21st, 2010

I think it’s interesting information for all, so enjoy :) )

Sataplia cave in Georgia

Sataplia Cave was discovered in 1925. Sataplia is a rather small cave, famous for fine speleothems and the dinosaur footprints nearby. The tour enters the through-cave on one hillside, crosses the hill underground and
then goes back on the surface past the dinosaur footprints.This cave is hard to reach and not very much visited by individual travelers. Best is to take a taxi from Kutaisi town square which takes about 45min. The best
thing to visit this cave is to book a guided Georgia trip, several tour operators include a day at the Nature Reserve.

The cave is named after Mt. Sataplia (494m asl), an extinct volcano, which is now a Nature Preserve. Thepreserve was intended to protect the five karsts caves of the area and the dinosaur footprints. At the moment
there are 200 footprints known, found in two different layers of the Cretaceous limestone. The 30cm long footprints of the lower layer belong to an unknown predator, the 48cm long footprints of the upper layer to an
Ornithopod herbivore.

Sataplia State Reserve is a most multifarious and very rare monument. It is of complex character and contains geologic, paleontological, speleological and botanical monuments.

The Sataplia Mountain is famous by its rarest and the most beautiful caves. This cave was firstly noticed by Kutaisi museum employee, pedagogues P. Chabukiani who was able to make organization of this valuable
monument protection by the local government, and in 1933, there was found a dinosaur trace.

Sataplia State Nature Reserve was created in 1935 to protect geological, paleontological, speleological and botanical monuments.

The reserve is located in Tskaltubo region in 260 km. from Tbilisi, and in 9 km. from the resort Tskaltubo. Sataplia Nature Reserve represents the south-west edge of Racha gorge, total area of the Nature Reserve
is 354 ha., 209 ha from here is covered by forest.
Relief: Sataplia Nature reserve is mountainous, it\\\’s great area is covered by most beautiful and multifarious wood strain Colchian type mixed forests. Mountainous Sataplia is located at 500 m. above sea level.
Here we meet 5 carts caves which are famous for their beauty, size and from the scientists’ points of view were taken great consideration. One of these karst cavern length is 600 m., the beauty of this cavern is a
cupola-shaped hall, located in 100 m. from the entrance, where the size and beauty of stalactites and stalagmites in the centre astonishes visitors. At the end of the cavern flows the spring which flows into the well,
after that the water goes on in narrow impassable clefts and finds its way out in the south slope of the Sataplia Mountain as Oghaskura. There is an extinct volcano crater in the Nature Reserve. The highest top is
at 520 m. above sea level.

Climate: subtropical, average early amount of precipitation is 1900 mm., in middle January 4, in August 25.

Flora: the forests of the Nature Reserve are Colchetian type. Here we meet the beech groves with evergreen understory, beech-hornbeam groves with boxwood understory, chestnut forest with yellow azalea and
Caucasian understory, alder forests with blackberry understory and others. There are nearly 60 kinds of wood plants. In the Colchian untouched forest woods, are represented maple, beech, Taxus baccata, Kolkhian
boxwood, bladder nut , common yew, Caucasian elm, Quercus imeretina Stev., and others. In the Georgian “Red List” are entered: sweet chestnut, Colchian boxwood, Taxus baccata, elm, oak and etc.

Fauna: 17 kinds of mammals, 8 reptiles, 5 amphibious, 65 sorts of birds. The main attractions of the Nature Reserve are footprints of the herbivorous and predatory dinosaurs in the limestone. From mammals here
we meet: bear, fox, jackal, lynx, deer, hare, badger, white marten, squirrel and etc. From birds: jay, cuckoo, nightingale, woodcock, oopoe, etc.
Soil: tropical podzolic soils, yellow and red alluvial soils, grey soils.

General Information for tourists:

• Distance from Tbilisi till the Nature Reserve is 260 km; from Kutaisi till the Nature reserve is 10 km.

• Time is 3-4 hours by car. from Tbilisi.

• Sataplia State Nature Reserve was established for the purpose of
protection of Colchian forest, unic spaleological and paleontological monuments. There is a karst cavern and traces of giant reptails – extinct dinosaurs on the therritory.

• From antient time, on the south slope of Sataplia, in the limestone cracks inhabited bees. The local population collected honey here, tha’ts why it was called Sataplia (place of honey).

Marie

Aug 21st, 2010

OMG I left an information about Sataplia cave 3 times, sorry it was Internal Server Error : X

Miroslav Provod

Oct 21st, 2010

Physics during the age of megaliths
Over more than twenty years, I have realized hundreds of experiments, which were mostly motivated by trying to uncover the reasons and causes of not always convincingly explained working activities of ancient civilizations. In these experiments, I came to the conclusion that many activities of ancient prehistoric cultures were clearly motivated by the desire to exploit knowledge about the attributes of static electricity. Even in academic publications, I found no information on the range of the found properties of static electricity. It cannot be therefore excluded that they have never been published. For this reason, I admit it might be an entirely new knowledge.

Four probably yet unpublished properties of static electricity showed on the theme of implementation of many megalithic and religious structures. Many often seemingly useless construction activities of our ancestors could not be convincingly and logically explained without the connection with these new findings of the properties of static electricity. Historians and archaeologists have often helped themselves out by saying that the motivation for constructing many buildings in our history was based solely on a “ritual” or “calendar reason. All researchers and scientists who “dared” linking knowledge of ancient cultures with modern knowledge of the physical energies were often ridiculed by generally accepted capacities and rendered as being textbook ignorants. The four properties of static electricity introduced are however far from a total explanation of all yet difficult to explain mysteries of our history. In some cases, the new knowledge about the properties of matter in connection with a charge of static electricity provides only partial explanation to the historical mysteries, which suggests that there can be many more unidentified properties of static electricity.

There is no doubt that there is an incorrect interpretation of certain parts of history in connection with the explanation of the motives for constructing many complex, but even the simplest of old buildings. It is therefore necessary to examine the question of logical reasons for building the constructions in context with new physical knowledge, which demonstrates that “knowledge” of ancient and extinct cultures surpassed the knowledge of modern history. The “ritual dogmas” will need to be replaced by new energy knowledge. This will create a real picture of the evolution of world cultures as well as a “springboard” for further research in some historical periods.

However, there are the already mentioned “scientific” obstacles that discourage many that are interested in modern research. These obstacles that psychologically bind the thinking of many researchers that are eager for truth are the skeptics. The skeptics, in an effort to stand out, which they cannot achieve in a different field of science, serve as scientific inquisitors. Being a skeptic is very easy as skeptics always respond to new ideas by saying “Everything that cannot be put in context with known facts cannot be assessed.” They refuse to respect the fact that all new findings were found behind the edge of known facts in most cases.

I was saddened, for example, when the skeptics in the Czech Republic attached an ‘erratic boulder’ to Erich von Daniken. Even if Daniken did not bring any revolutionary ideas in his work, he would have done more for the promotion of history than all the Czech inquisitional skeptics combined. Daniken inspired hundreds of thousands of researchers around the world by his extensive work – thousands of them chose their field of work due to his exploratory study. And last but not least, after centuries of neglect many historical monuments that were described by Daniken are now cracking under the pressure of curious tourists. Daniken fully described the megalithic culture in his writings.
Literary works by Erich Daniken are well above the writings of other authors, who constantly repeat pieces of information that have already been published many times. I have studied all the writings of Erich Daniken and I can say that I gained more knowledge about the megaliths from his literature than I would have received by personal visits to the places described. There are more such cases, which I will not address here. I regard the ‘erratic boulder’ given to Erich Daniken as the worst injustice.

Skeptics could not have objected to the way Mr. Daniken describes the megalithic culture, but they likely just disagreed with his opinion that it could not have been created by a ‘textbook type’ civilization and that ancient cultures received the information from some advanced cultures from outer space. And here is the discord, skeptics recognize the current interpretation of history, Mr. Daniken, as well as many logically thinking people, does not. It does not matter where the ancient cultures received the information. The fact is that they must have obtained it somewhere. The view of Mr. Daniken that ancient cultures may have obtained the information from space cannot be assessed in any other way then as a creative idea. Any doubts about the astronauts from other planets can encourage others to think about other explanations. The essence of the literary work of Mr. Daniken is not just getting the source of information, but it is the whole megalithic culture. Reacting to the opinion of Mr. Daniken by granting him an ‘erratic boulder’ seems amateur and inappropriate. People expect from scientists that they will scientifically and properly reason their decision.

If skeptics think that people used to build thousands of megaliths all over the world for ritual and calendar purposes (as is currently mentioned in history) they only compromise themselves in the same way as archaeologists do. Unless it is explained what tools were used to machine the hardest diorite rock, unless it is experimentally demonstrated that it is possible to transport a block of rock weighing one thousand tons to a distance of two kilometers solely by the use of pulling and ropes, unless it is explained how people communicated with each other when they built the same types of megalithic structures around the world the account of Mr. Daniken cannot be clearly and categorically questioned. In this case, the purposely formulated assumption proposed by the skeptics by granting Erich von Daniken an ‘erratic boulder’ stated exactly the opposite. They reached a phase where public begun to question statements given by the skeptics.

The new knowledge about static electricity resulting from the research of megaliths seems like a great hint not only for the research of ancient cultures but also for several other fields. In addition, we can expect further findings of the unknown properties of static electricity.

I remind the importance of the four attributes of static electricity, which I describe in dozens of articles at http://www.miroslavprovod.com.
1 – Each material has a charge with three energy components (aura, zones, and interzones).
2 – When auras of two or more charges come into contact they merge into one common charge with common energy components.
3 – By merging charges into a joint charge, there is a gradual equalizing of their energetic potentials.
4 – During the equalizing of energetic potentials there is also a transfer of chemical properties.

October 2010
Miroslav Provod

hannah jaknes

Nov 3rd, 2010

this is too much to read it sticks!!!!!!

vishi-vish

Nov 9th, 2010

This was really very good and informative.I am a student, not of any collage but of high school.I love searching on internet about mystries.Thank you for prividing information.

I also want to know about:
1.Solar storm
2.Bermuda triangle
3.21 december 2012

If anyone reading knows answer then please let me know: vishakhaghadi@yahoo.in

kailasam

Jan 9th, 2011

very useful

laura mendez

Mar 14th, 2011

this help me very much with the homework of history
so good luck in the future.

laura mendez

Mar 14th, 2011

this help me very much with the homework of history
so good luck in the future.

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