Post by nyctitropist on Apr 25, 2023 19:20:38 GMT
Hi, name's Hector. Yes, I have a degree in Anthropology with a focus in archaeology and GIS systems as a means of archaeological survey. That's how I got involved in the program in the first place.
Yeah, I know you're immediately writing it off because it has a vague connection to a God you don't believe in, but I remind you that NO ONE believes in Quetzalcoatl, and yet we don't write off the ancient Maya as having not existed or done anything they claim to have as a result of our lack of faith in their gods.
All stories have a kernel of truth, and it's through the careful search of those kernels that we find the evidences on the earth which can validate parts of those stories.
What I have here is image proof of the existence of a prehistoric culture that existed "in situ" before the eruption of Es Safa in Syria. We know it's prehistoric because there are structures covered and partially covered by the magma flows on the outskirts primarily and in decreasing number as you travel the 6 miles to the epicenter of the structure.
Canonical Biblical text gives a vague depiction of the tower and simply claims the people were confused and removed. The book of Jasher, which is referenced in the cannon and which was discovered and validated by Josephus gives an account that the people were obsessed with the tower after the flood of Noah and built it by having each person who ever climbed it bring a stone to add to the top. A weird tradition people still do today with mountain hiking.
Most convincingly to me, and the reason I'm convinced of the nature of this structure, is because in that vague canonical description, it mentions that the tower was east in the land of Shinar. It is only mentioned again in the bible in passing when following the Israelited out of Egypt as they enter the land for the first time from the east of Jordan at Mount Hernon (in existence today) which the "Ammorites" (one of the bibles most ancient cultures) called Shenir.
With that connection and the description from Josephus and the book of Jasher, there is a circumference of ~46km meaning a diameter of 6 miles. I knew something that significant couldn't exist on earth and NOT leave a mark considering the ancient structures that have which are so very much smaller. That satellite scraping to the east of Hernon very quickly led me to the ONLY volcano in the near east anywhere close to the biblical depiction of where the Tower would have been.
Not to mention that while most volcanoes exist on and because of mountains, this one exists on flat land which the bible depicts as lush plains in the early days of humanity. It would have been very easy to disprove if the strangest volcano in human history with it's unknown last eruption date didn't exist in the exact circumference of the ancient text's description as well as highlight it's destruction with "flaming arrows from the sky" and "the earth opening it's mouth and swallowing a third of the tower."
It's too uncanny to be coincidence. Whether or not you believe in divinity, I think the earliest group of humans with one language legitimately experienced and documented the destruction of their tower at the hands of "an act of God," and we have the technology to prove it by looking down from the heavens and observing the remnants of their structures.
I'm new to the forum, but I signed up because reddit doesn't seem the place for people serious about GIS and the implications for Archaeology.
I may a too long video, but I consolidated the info here in a much shorter form explaining the conclusions. I would appreciate honest unbiased interaction on the implications.
rumble.com/v2kf92i-i-think-i-found-the-tower-of-babel-in-google-earth....html
Yeah, I know you're immediately writing it off because it has a vague connection to a God you don't believe in, but I remind you that NO ONE believes in Quetzalcoatl, and yet we don't write off the ancient Maya as having not existed or done anything they claim to have as a result of our lack of faith in their gods.
All stories have a kernel of truth, and it's through the careful search of those kernels that we find the evidences on the earth which can validate parts of those stories.
What I have here is image proof of the existence of a prehistoric culture that existed "in situ" before the eruption of Es Safa in Syria. We know it's prehistoric because there are structures covered and partially covered by the magma flows on the outskirts primarily and in decreasing number as you travel the 6 miles to the epicenter of the structure.
Canonical Biblical text gives a vague depiction of the tower and simply claims the people were confused and removed. The book of Jasher, which is referenced in the cannon and which was discovered and validated by Josephus gives an account that the people were obsessed with the tower after the flood of Noah and built it by having each person who ever climbed it bring a stone to add to the top. A weird tradition people still do today with mountain hiking.
Most convincingly to me, and the reason I'm convinced of the nature of this structure, is because in that vague canonical description, it mentions that the tower was east in the land of Shinar. It is only mentioned again in the bible in passing when following the Israelited out of Egypt as they enter the land for the first time from the east of Jordan at Mount Hernon (in existence today) which the "Ammorites" (one of the bibles most ancient cultures) called Shenir.
With that connection and the description from Josephus and the book of Jasher, there is a circumference of ~46km meaning a diameter of 6 miles. I knew something that significant couldn't exist on earth and NOT leave a mark considering the ancient structures that have which are so very much smaller. That satellite scraping to the east of Hernon very quickly led me to the ONLY volcano in the near east anywhere close to the biblical depiction of where the Tower would have been.
Not to mention that while most volcanoes exist on and because of mountains, this one exists on flat land which the bible depicts as lush plains in the early days of humanity. It would have been very easy to disprove if the strangest volcano in human history with it's unknown last eruption date didn't exist in the exact circumference of the ancient text's description as well as highlight it's destruction with "flaming arrows from the sky" and "the earth opening it's mouth and swallowing a third of the tower."
It's too uncanny to be coincidence. Whether or not you believe in divinity, I think the earliest group of humans with one language legitimately experienced and documented the destruction of their tower at the hands of "an act of God," and we have the technology to prove it by looking down from the heavens and observing the remnants of their structures.
I'm new to the forum, but I signed up because reddit doesn't seem the place for people serious about GIS and the implications for Archaeology.
I may a too long video, but I consolidated the info here in a much shorter form explaining the conclusions. I would appreciate honest unbiased interaction on the implications.
rumble.com/v2kf92i-i-think-i-found-the-tower-of-babel-in-google-earth....html