Post

@CodyNailedIt Seriously.
From the top down... from the TOP down!
One single piece of bedrock.


English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt M sure when Jay covers this, he will knock it out of the park..
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt That shit was easy, just ask Ethiopia. Rumors are "the Angels" did construction at night.


English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt 🤯 wow....but, how? I wholly reject that ancient people with hand tools built this. Anybody with a lick of common sense and critical thinking has to agree🤔🤯
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt So you telling me they carved that out the mountain lol? Does it have ways to go inside?
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt Hmmm, this is what crop circle tech used to be able to do?
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt And yet. 97% of human population doesn't even know anything about it, since mainstream is for decades covering up multiple fascinating histories, while at all times prioritizing Stonehendge - as primary reminder on the ''peaks of previous civilizations'' : )
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt Done with Copper tools right? Is that even possible? What type of material (including what we have today) could be needed as a min to do this?
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt there are a couple of tiny replicas in the same hill.. this one is the biggest.
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt It is part of the Ajanta caves.... More then 30 in total...even entire living quarters for worshippers is carved out the entire mountain... Not just the main temple.
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt But but but. . . Copper Chisels and a Primitive Culture built this. Hahaha 🤦♂️
Can’t wait for the world to be absolutely Shook by the Truth Thats about to Blow their Minds.
The real truth about Earth and Humanity will change everything.
Prepare for Awesomeness.
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt The Ajanta and Ellora caves are a spectacular place to visit,
I'd advice visiting closer to winters.
it's a Buddhist temple complex with numerous cave structures.
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt Really doesn't make any sense, does it? It's too impressive!
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt Hamers and chisels up to it again. You'd think this site would end that idea.
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt Its shaped using molten natron to break the bedrock down, and then built back into these beautiful masterpieces using wood ash and slaked lyme and water. Like mixing concrete, except harder and better.
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt I could carve that out in 2 weeks with a stone tool and some hemp rope ..................
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt Can u just imagine the the amount of planning and physical work that went into that
My god , the craftsmanship is incredible but the physical and mental aspects are astonishing
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt That site looks like it was carved from above using a technology unknown to us. And certainly not carved by hand.
It is impossible to carve this by hand and make not a single mistake during the process.
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt Carved with the sharpened bones of their deceased elders no doubt.
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt Why would you go through such lengths unless you didn't want to be seen from a distance and be attacked 🤔
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt They used some rock and a makeshift hammer to create this I guess.
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt This is what I have been wanting you to spend some time on!! I am so amazed by this building!! This is definitely one of the places that tells me that the people that teach us our ancient history have been making a lot of s*** up.
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt Visualized and psychokinetically manifested by a powerful Siddha (or two or three)?
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt Basalt. I am thinking ancient laser technology…
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt This place always leaves mind blown. Insane detail.
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt It's just weird, a place so significant, yet so few have even heard about it. Was blown away myself when I saw it. Recommended youtube documentary:
youtu.be/aYCAU1YT4FQ

YouTube
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt I read an pre-1900's book about rocks (may not seem very exciting), but it explained that there are super cycles of Earth where things weld together into giant rocks and then crumble over time. Eventually, mostly crumbles remain and they weld back together again.
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt Surah Al-A'raf [7:74]:"And remember when He made you successors after the people of 'Ād and settled you in the land: you build palaces on its plains and carve homes into the mountains. So remember the favors of Allah and do not spread corruption in the land." The Holy Quran.
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt And where did they leave all the excavated rock 🤔
English

This is something that has really befuddled me for a while. Similar to the granite boxes/lids in the Serapeum in Egypt.
There seems to have been something functional about having a thing made from a single block of stone. Not just aesthetically, but functionally important in some way.
My gut says it has to do with resonance frequencies somehow.
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt The kailasa temple?
There's like 20 of them here but this is the largest by far
English

@TheProjectUnity @CodyNailedIt That's the Grishneshwar Temple, Ellora, Maharashtra 431102 [India]. I visit it and it's very impressive
English






