Located about 100 ft below the base of the Great Pyramid, deep in the center of the Subterranean Chamber, is “The Pit.” According to engineer Christopher Dunn, it may have housed the equipment that provided the priming pulses that supplied the chemicals that were pumped into the Northern and Southern Shafts of the “Queen's Chamber.”
Mexican actress María Félix posing in front of the colossal 167 ton basalt monolith of Tlaloc. Dedicated to the Aztec god of rain and fertility, it currently stands at the entrance to the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City.
“One of the finest aerial photos I've ever seen of a Native American mound showing how massive the mound really is. That is me walking down the ramp. When in use a thousand years ago, there was a large temple structure on the top. This is the largest mound at the [once] 23-mound Winterville, Mississippi complex. Research on "botanicals" found at the site revealed this mound was the focal point of ceremonial rituals involving the use of some hallucinogenics.”
- @DrGregLittle2
📷 by Stan Prachniak
Did you know that approx 90% of the ruins seen at Machu Picchu are the small rough-stone & mortar Inca style construction, but about 10% are this superior precision mortarless granite engineering? #lostcivilization
Notice this giant entryway that Cassie is standing in front of at Cambodia’s Koh Ker pyramid complex that was precision fashioned from a solid piece of stone & is clearly superior to the dilapidated brick temple that surrounds it…