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To the south of the village Asini in the Peloponnesus near Tolon, there is a mysterious
hill. Surrounded by the water of the Mediterranean, is looks like an observation post though
the megalithic constructions seem to point to a more important purpose. Arriving
from the coastal road, the first thing a visitor sees is a apparently useless
wall, built against the rock-face. Alle the stones fit nicely together without
any use of cement.
At the east side of the
peninsula a fifteen meters high wall has been built, showing vertical grooves as
if the were made by advanced machinery. At the other side, the west side, the is
a split in the hill, unreachably high, which is filled up with a wall
constructed in the same manner. Perfectly fitting
stones, no cement. That wall effectively supports a mysterious plateau. Was this
place used for sacred purposed in prehistoric times?
More in the e-book "Weird Ancient Technology", or in the Dutch
book "De Verborgen Geheimen van de Mensheid, Part
I, Chapter III.
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| HAMMERING
OF HARD STONE |
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| SAWING
IN HARD STONE |
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| DRILLING
IN HARD STONE |
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| MILLING
OF HARD STONE |
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| TURNING
OF HARD ROCK |
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| PLASTER
LAYER ON HARD STONE |
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| SMOOTHING
OF HARD STONE |
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| POLISHING
OF HARD STONE |
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| TRANSPORTING
MEGALITHS |
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| SEAMLESS
JOINTS BETWEEN STONES |
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| SEAMLESS
JOINTS BETWEEN MEGALITHS |
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| SOFTENING HARD STONE |
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| MELTING
OF HARD STONE |
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| TRANSATLANTIC
CONTACTS |
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