The Terraforming of Terra - Guadalupe River, South Fork, Part 1, November 16, 2020
Writer-videographer Jock Doubleday explores the South Fork of the Guadalupe River in Central Texas noting molded stepped hills, integral (unbroken, unfractured) artificial concrete sections built at 45-degree angles to the flow of the river, earthquake-mitigating sectional geometry, and other evidence of ancient terraforming. #terraformingofterra
"This is ancient terraforming laid down by an advanced race or races in the distant past."
"The Terraforming of Terra - Guadalupe River, South Fork, November 16, 2020"
"Geologists would say that the reason the hills are stepped in Texas is because they are sedimentary. But what we see here is not sedimentary layers. There's no layering to speak of, at all, just molded steps. The Ancients made sure that this river that they built from the riverbed up stayed where they put it, stayed exactly where they wanted it to be. How did they do that? How did they ensure that the river would stay on course? Well, they built a 110- or 120-foot-high bank over here made out of concrete. This is gypsum concretized by the Ancients, heated into the form you see it now. So, the point is that these are not separate layers being eroded [breaking out] over time. These are separate forms in one molded concrete structure. So, we have this step, which is a form, and above it another step . . . This is all one concrete stepped shape with step-forms within it. . . . This is what I've seen all around Texas: the stepped quality of the hills."
(start minute 1:08)
"The Terraforming of Terra - Guadalupe River, South Fork, Part 1, November 16, 2020"
"The stepping [of the hills] is a feature that the Ancients used all around the world. They used it in South Africa. They used it in Bosnia. And you can see what I call "step-downs" throughout Bosnia that go for miles and miles and miles along the hills. It's the same principle."
(start minute 2:53)
"The Terraforming of Terra - Guadalupe River, South Fork, Part 1, November 16, 2020"
"And we're seeing our first section break. And this is diagonal to the flow of the river. It's a 45[-degree angle] to the flow of the river. . . . Now they're working in sections in this top layer. We're going to see the same angle, a 45[-degree angle] to the flow of the river, right there."
(start minute 3:12)
"The Terraforming of Terra - Guadalupe River, South Fork, Part 1, November 16, 2020"
"This diagonal riverbank construction is what we find on two continents, both in Eurasia and throughout North America. The Ancients used diagonal seams in their [riverbed and riverbank] concrete to keep their structures strong through the ages."
(start minute 4:20)
"The Terraforming of Terra - Guadalupe River, South Fork, Part 1, November 16, 2020"
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tIiqPwZh9cg