This basalt mountain cliff was impossibly carved top down to make a perfectly laid out stone temple that is the largest monolithic structure in the world: Kailasa Temple, Maharashtra, India.
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(Ancient Architects) The enigmatic Kailasa Buddhist, Hindu, Jain Temple is part of the Ellora Buddhist monastic cave complex in Maharashtra, India, has fascinated researchers for centuries.
It is the world’s largest monolithic structure and without doubt one of the most breathtaking sites on the planet. But it is often overlooked or overshadowed by famous sites like:
- Pyramids of Giza in Egypt
- Stonehenge in England
- The Pyramid of the Sun or Cholula (the world's largest pyramid) in Mexico
- Borobudur in Java, Indonesia (the world's largest excavated Buddhist temple complex, the size of hill with stone bells on top)
- Angkor Wat in Angkor, Cambodia (the massive stone Buddhist monastery and surrounding Khmer civilization)
- Angkor Thom in Siem Reap, Cambodia (the Indiana Jones-style Temple of Doom discovered near Angkor, where locals claim there are many such massive structures still buried by jungle overgrowth, much like the Amazon and Mayan civilization temples and others in the Americas)
- Gobekli Tepe in Turkey
- The Bosnian Pyramid in Bosnia
- Mes Aynak in Afghanistan (the world's largest unexcavated Buddhist temple complex)
- Ajina Tepe in Tajikistan
- Machu Picchu in the Andes in Peru.
The strange "pyramids" of Mt. Kailash |
Kailasa is certainly one of humanity’s greatest architectural achievements, assuming that we humans built it on our own. The ancient architects were very likely aided or instructed and provided with the unknown technology by the Devas or "Ancient Astronauts."
All video images were pulled from Google Images and used for educational purposes only.
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