Posted on 03/25/2015 11:41:42 AM PDT by SunkenCiv
On a remote Pacific island not much bigger than Manhattan, there are ancient pyramids built out of living coral. New evidence reveals that these tombs could be up to 700 years old much older than experts had previously thought.
The royal tombs are tucked away in an artificially built ancient city called Leluh just off the mainland of Kosrae, a Micronesian island. Leluh was home to Kosraean high chiefs (as well as some lower chiefs and commoners, too) from about 1250 until the mid-1800s, when foreign whalers, traders and missionaries started to arrive on the island.
With impressive canals and walled compounds built from basalt, Leluh is often considered a companion city to the more famous Micronesian settlement of Nan Madol, on the nearby island of Pohnpei. While the tiny islets of Nan Madol were built on top of a coral reef, at Leluh, coral was actually incorporated into the construction material of many buildings, including the royal tombs.
(Excerpt) Read more at livescience.com ...
Interesting
Thanks, have never been here but have been to Nan Madol which is like a Polynesian, jungle version of Venice, only accessible and tourable by small boat.
Fascinating. Never heard of this one before. According to the natives, during WWII the Japanese supposedly found multiple sarcophagi lined with platinum, containing longer-than-usual bodies there, but Japan claims no knowledge of this today.
Probably because the story is a total fabrication. Platinum is not found in very many places in quantity (common in some meteorites), and none of those places are in the Pacific, or anywhere near Micronesia.
Aw, now you’ve PROVEN it was aliens.
Well the implication is that it came from a past, global, higher culture. That would also explain the megalithic basalt construction.
Thanks Talisker. Since it is less than 1000 years old, the higher global culture must have done a great job of hiding from everyone else.
Sorry about that - I confused your article about Leluh with the related Nan Madol site. Yes, the Leluh burial mounds date back a thousand years. Nan Madol is different.
Carbon dating indicates that the construction of Nan Madol began around 1200 CE, while excavations show that the area may have been occupied as early as 200 BCE. Some probable quarry sites around the island have been identified, but the exact origin of the stones of Nan Madol is yet undetermined. None of the proposed quarry sites exist in Madolenihmw, meaning that the stones must have been transported to their current location. It has been suggested that they might have been floated via raft from the quarry, and a short dive between the island and the quarries shows a trail of dropped stoneS...There's a paper on dating the stones on the Academia website, but I didn't sign in to download it, due to my own laziness. Not much of a mystery here.
I got the information during a mind meld.
LOL, 250 million tons of magnetized basalt logs weighing up to 50 tons each used as the sole architectural material in a complex bigger than Giza on an island without fresh water containing manufactured tunnels to other islands - and none of the engineering requirements of its creation has been explained, especially supposedly by natives living in grass huts and transporting themselves in canoes.
No mystery here?
Whatever.
There’s no water supply at Nan Madol; the island itself has water, which means the water had to be fetched. With a complex that took that much work to build, that the authority there could have water and food brought from the mainland isn’t that farfetched. The rumors about tunnels running from the complex are likely of the same source as the flying dragon, giant platinum coffins, and black magic. Not surprisingly, efforts to find said tunnels have all failed.
In the WWII era there were cargo cults in the region that believed some pretty strange things.
It has been suggested that they might have been floated via raft from the quarry, and a short dive between the island and the quarries shows a trail of dropped stoneS...
Dang it, you tease the "magic dragon" idea and than shoot it down with the raft and dropped stones, dang it :)
:’) I remember an article about the cargo cult on one particular island; the article was probably in “Argosy” or “True”, and in the 1960s, when WWII was still relatively recent. The cultists revered the cargo deity they called “John Frum”, and even preserved a snapshot of him from the 1940s. The photo was of an actual US serviceman of course, and at that time he was still alive. I don’t think they were able to interview him, but that gave a brief rundown of his actual identity and the wartime work on the island. And imagine — that was a cult based on a distorted folkloric version of known historic events from just a generation earlier. :’)
Von Danniken did I think. :’)
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