Monday, March 10, 2025

US explorers find lake under gas station


How could freshwater get into the underworld? Drainage?

Alabama has a cave wonderland
Spelunking
is cool, albeit dangerous, as a sport and pastime. It's incredible when archeologists and anthropologists find human ancestors 
took psychedelic drugs in caves in Spain, the Americas (like Mexico's cenotes and Mayan sacrifice sites and Peru's Nazca Lines region), and Africa. Caves are perfect places for preservation of artifacts, including miniature ET bodies. What in the world would a lake be doing under a gas station, which is sure to eventually pollute its pristine waters? What else is to be found in the underworld the government keeps secret from us, with its high-speed railroad system and massive natural and bored cave systems across the country?

Who'd risk life and limb to suffocate in cave in?
Go to Las Vegas and watch the daily workers going underground to do their secret science work in black budget projects, or rediscover great caverns in the Southwest like the massive cities under the Grand Canyon, which were revealed in full newspaper spreads then denied and blocked off to the public. The truth is out there, um, down there. Los Angeles has a widespread system of caves under downtown, which were also revealed by the Los Angeles Times but then denied so that now no one pays any attention. Move along. Nothing to see here.

Massive lake found 170 feet below gas station
(CaveChronicles) March 6, 2025: A gas station owner invited us out to explore a massive cave in the petroleum product dispensary's backyard. We had no idea how huge it would turn out to be -- or how potentially polluted as a garbage pit with possibly volatile compounds in the air. Check out the channel: ‪@ActionAdventureTwins‬
  • Pat Macpherson, Dhr. Seven, CC Liu (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

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