TheNewCatfish
Sr. Member
- Mar 4, 2011
- 344
- 125
Let me say from the start i'm not some whacko selling a miraculous new devise. I am however curious to know how ancient people managed to find huge deposits of gold without the benefit of modern technology and geology. When the Spanish arrived in the New World, they found the Incas had rooms piled to the ceiling with gold treasure. Where'd all that gold come from ? How was it found ? Several hundred years later, the Conquistadores also discovered several Indian tribes in the Southwest that had been mining gold for a long, long time. But how did these stoneage people locate such rich deposits ? Makes you wonder, doesn't it ? Having lived in the mountains, i've noticed lightening often strikes repeatedly in the same location during thunderstorms. Almost like it's been attracted by something on the ground. I read up on lightening and learned that it actually originates at ground level, (Not in the sky). Technically speaking, lightening actually travels UP before it travels DOWN. Could it be that a sizeable gold deposit underground might act as a conductor of electricity ? Actually pinpointing an area where gold exists. Did ancient people use simple observation to locate gold deposits ? Better yet, doesn't the National Weather Service keep detailed records of how often and where lightening strikes the earth ? What if you overlayed this lightening strike information in areas where gold is already known to be found. Would a cluster of lightening strikes on a mountainside indicate a marker ? Maybe the ancients discovered something modern man has yet to figure out. What do you think ?
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