Newbie
November 2019 - Nov 30, 2019 3:28:31 GMT
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Post by russ on Nov 29, 2019 7:48:40 GMT
I have been searching around the Arctic on Google Earth, in light of the recent structures found that apparently went missing. I am attaching a live image taken on google Earth, for your advice as to what to do with it. Taken today 11/23/2019 and the coordinates are shown. I have many other ones from today but cannot send them all through at once. I have done a depth analysis as well as a size analysis. This is huge. 4, 116.27 square kilometers, roughly. See attached. Also, the depth of the two bottom corners are around 2,890 meters deep and the top point about 2,570 meters deep. This is very clear in what it is - a Pyramid outlined below the water.
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Master Cartographer
April 2015 - Nov 21, 2024 8:06:11 GMT
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Post by syzygy on Nov 29, 2019 8:04:29 GMT
hi and welcome! -thanks for the placemark! still however I cannot say any other that have already said:
these straight lines all over the GE/GMaps global oceans are only digital imagery features of the software's ocean bed texture - these are not existing in real.
you might think of these as a data glitch, or as a simple aesthetic fault of GE/GMaps' ocean floor visualisation.
best! g
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March 2015 - Jan 23, 2023 9:58:32 GMT
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Post by Admin on Nov 29, 2019 8:11:11 GMT
Thanks for the placemark Russ. These are anomalies produced by the sideways sonar scanner usually.
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Newbie
June 2023 - Jun 12, 2023 5:27:06 GMT
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Post by david33 on Jun 12, 2023 5:23:20 GMT
The undersea building you uncovered has a striking resemblance to a pyramid. The considerable depth and size investigation you performed emphasizes the significance of this discovery even more. The presence of such a large pyramid underwater in the Arctic is remarkable. While I cannot personally confirm the veracity of your findings, I propose contacting relevant scientific and archaeological organizations that specialize in maritime research and underwater archaeology. Thank you for sharing your find; I hope it piques your interest and prompts additional research into this fascinating submerged structure.
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