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hollow earth and eden


seek the truth

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True, if you're not up on your geology and physics.

--Jaylemurph

Or it may seem that way if you're not up on your astronomy and philosophy. Edited by St Q
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Ahhh, look, from that web site:

linked-image

That old thing. That old, impossible, thoroughly debunked but nevertheless cute map.

--Jaylemurph

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Ahhh, look, from that web site:

linked-image

That old thing. That old, impossible, thoroughly debunked but nevertheless cute map.

--Jaylemurph

True Very True. :lol: i i'm with jaylemurph here.

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I don't believe the "Hollow Earth" theory either, but unlike yourselves, I have a hard time ridiculing those that do.

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For gracious sakes... anyone new to the forums, please forgo all of your curiosity and wonder... please take a week to read every previous post ever made before making a new one so not to upset anyone who's been here for years discussing this stuff... Nevermind that it might be new to you. People have their arms twisted and contorted to horrible disfigurements as they are pressed to read everything and anything that is posted and so they are forced to read the new things you post and it's really really just excrutiating for them. :P

hehehehe

Why put people to so much tongue lashing for such thing? I think it's good that people are able to restart threads, bring back old ones, etc. It gives the ole hard heads some time to stew over it from the last time it was posted and those who love not being wrong another chance to boast about their knowledge.

Edited by Kitrah
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...So what? We should collectively underwrite fantastical beliefs?

What are the guidelines for that?

--Jaylemurph

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I also don't believe in the Hollow Earth theory, I know alot of people think it's really but i don't see how it could be with the volcano's and other thing's we have proof of....

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http://www.squarecircles.com/edenproject/missiontoeden.htm

Robert Sarmast's book, Discovery of Atlantis, has been causing quite a stir both on Cyprus and internationally. According to Sarmast's research, the Atlantis of Plato's Critias matches details found on bathymetric maps of the land underwater belonging to Cyprus. This is particularly fascinating for Urantia Book readers, because this location happens to be where the Urantia Book places the First Garden of Eden, where Adam and Eve first lived on our world 35,000 years ago. There are so many parallels between Critias and the Urantia Book's description of the Garden that it would be thrilling for both Atlantologists and Urantia Book enthusiasts to go under the sea and find what lies there.

http://www.sevenfoldbooks.com/

http://strangemaps.wordpress.com/2007/03/

Edited by crystal sage
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Ahhh, look, from that web site:

linked-image

That old thing. That old, impossible, thoroughly debunked but nevertheless cute map.

--Jaylemurph

http://www.uky.edu/KGS/education/mammothcave.htm

". Mammoth Cave is three times longer than its nearest competitor. Not only is the cave the longest in the world, but cave mappers believe the cave system will eventually prove to be 560 miles (900 km) long!"

Matto Grosso...

http://www.ciclismoclassico.com/trip/view.php?trip_id=19

Grotte della Rupe (Etruscan Orvieto Underground - Natural Attraction ... the caves, and try to explain the network of tunnels honeycombing the tufa subsoil. ..

Brazillian caves....

http://www.mre.gov.br/cdbrasil/itamaraty/w...na/apresent.htm

"The Brazilian caverns also conserve bones and fossilised traces of a rich extinct fauna, especially of the great mammals (Megatheriums, Toxodons, Gliptodons and others) of the Pleistocene period (10 thousand to 1 million years ago).

Also, cave paintings, burials, fire remains and other evidences of old civilisations are common in our caves, which are recognised as important archeological sites of worldwide interest."

http://www.totse.com/en/fringe/flying_sauc...a/undgempr.html

http://www.bigfootencounters.com/biology/chapters.htm

Derd caves...

prehistoric race had built subterranean caves, now inhabited by the â€ËÅ“Dero’, .

http://www.v-j-enterprises.com/serpent.html

http://archives.zinester.com/43520/75323.html

Dero, the Atlantean Root Race, and other bizarre underground dwellers! ...

http://north.infothai.com/attractions.html

http://www.video.scubadata.com/index.php?t...40bbbace919ca5b

The team leader Marco swim trough tunnels in Nereo cave - Alghero Sardinia . ... Thousands of birds gather at sunset and dive into a very deep cave. ...

http://www.radio.cz/en/article/88125

A year ago we reported on a Czech expedition exploring the world's largest salt cave in Iran. As a matter of fact, Czech explorers have also been to the deepest cave in the world. Two speleologists from the city of Brno have just returned from Abkhazia where an international expedition increased the penetrated depth to 2,170 metres, firmly establishing the Krubera-Voronya as the deepest cave on earth.

t is definitely deeper. The entry in is at 2,250 metres above the sea and water flows out of the cave system either at sea level or under. So there are potentially another 100 metres as far as depth is concerned. Lengthwise there are still some 10-15 kilometres of passages waiting to be explored."

http://www.earthchangestv.com/breaking/Jan...118DeepCave.htm

" But in 1999, the Ukranian cavers found two "windows" within a 200-foot shaft in the cave that led to new passages and deeper pits. In August and September 2000, they joined a French and Spanish expedition in pushing the new discoveries to a depth of 4,600 feet."

http://www2.nature.nps.gov/geology/USGSNPS/cave/cave.html

There are about 17,000 known caves in the United States. They occur in every State except Rhode Island and Louisiana. About 125 caves have been opened to the public for study and enjoyment. Of these, 15 are in national parks or monuments, and 30 are in State parks. The remainder are privately owned and operated. Most of these caves are in the Appalachian Mountains, the Ozark Mountains, the Black Hills, and the limestone regions of Kentucky, Tennessee, and Indiana.

The size and depth of many caves in the United States are impressive. Seven caves have more than 15 passage miles. The longest is the Flint-Mammoth Cave system in Kentucky with more than 169 miles. The other six are Jewel Cave in South Dakota (54.4 miles), Organ Cave in West Virginia (32 miles), Wind Cave in South Dakota (28.7 miles), Cumberland Caverns in Tennessee (23.2 miles), Sloan Valley Cave system in Kentucky (22.4 miles), and Crevice Cave in Missouri (20.8 miles).

spacer image The deepest cave in the United States is Neff Canyon in Utah. There, a depth of 1,189 feet below the entrance is reached along a steeply sloping 1,700-foot passage. The second deepest cave is Carlsbad Caverns in New Mexico; its lowest point is 1,022 feet below the entrance. Ellisons Cave system in Georgia, a close rival of Carlsbad, has a depth of nearly 1,000 feet.

spacer image The largest cave room is in Carlsbad Caverns, where the Big Room covers 14 acres. This room is 1,800 feet long and ranges up to 1,100 feet wide. The maximum height of the ceiling is 225 feet. The size of the Big Room, the length of the caverns (14.9 miles, the 11th longest in the United States), and the depth probably make Carlsbad the biggest cave in the United States.

http://www.cs.indiana.edu/~willie/willie_adv03dec.html

:tu: The world is riddled with massive caves.. many kilometres in length..... easily sufficient for the subterranean cultures...of legends... (Ellisons Cave system in Georgia, alone can hold a whole town...!!!)...and it's only the 11th largest in America!!!!

http://www.kuleuven.ac.be/spekul/expeditio...ietoverview.htm

The Tua Chua and Phong Tho areas in Lai Chau Province house magnificient caveslike the Ta Chinh Cave, 2,015m long and 286m deep; the SiLeng Chai Cave 1,162m long and 286 m deep. In particular the Cong Nuoc Cave is a magnificent destination, the deepest cave system in Southeast Asia. There is huge potential to develop cave tourism and adventure tourism in Viet Nam.

http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/showart...num=01INN120306

http://dsc.discovery.com/convergence/plane...uide/caves.html

A far less corrosive, but completely outsized, relative of Villa Luz is in China's Guangxi and Chongquing provinces. The strange, mushroomy landscape of these parts is due entirely to a vast and monumental layer of regional limestone that is dissolving away. B) Hidden among the strange hills are remarkable sinkholes called tiankeng, or "sky holes," that are deep and wide enough to hide a few Empire State Buildings. These were all caves once, until their roofs collapsed. Today visitors can actually walk through caves beside an underground river to reach the bottom of one of these sheer-walled holes in the earth.

Edited by crystal sage
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For gracious sakes... anyone new to the forums, please forgo all of your curiosity and wonder... please take a week to read every previous post ever made before making a new one so not to upset anyone who's been here for years discussing this stuff... Nevermind that it might be new to you. People have their arms twisted and contorted to horrible disfigurements as they are pressed to read everything and anything that is posted and so they are forced to read the new things you post and it's really really just excrutiating for them.
ROTFLMAO... I'm keeping a copy of this in my docs folder, in case I have to sue you for giving me a hernia. That's too funny. :tsu:
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"Hollow Earth" could be a misunderstanding.

Olaf Jansen: "In front of us, girding the horizon from left to right, was a vaporish fog or mist, black as Egyptian night at the water's edge, and white like a steam-cloud toward the top, which was finally lost to view as it blended with the great white flakes of falling snow."

Admiral Byrd: "Vast ice and snow below, note coloration of yellowish nature, and disperse in a linear pattern. Altering course for a better examination of this color pattern below, note reddish or purple color also. Circle this area two full turns and return to assigned compass heading. Position check made again to base camp, and relay information concerning colorations in the ice and snow below."

Both Jansen and Byrd describe strange but completely different phenomena concerning their immediate surroundings. These strange effects may be indicative of passing through some sort of portal or gateway. The worlds that they visited may not be ours.

At the time, these men were not familiar with the terms, and especially the concepts, known today as "parallel dimensions" and "alternate universes". Anything remotely akin to such phenomena might be perceived, in their minds, as "inside" or "within". Psychologically speaking, their interpretation or construct of a parallel world would be viewed as a world existing "within" or "inside" the earth, hence a "hollow earth".

I'll admit that one theory sounds just as crazy as the other, but which one sounds more probable?

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