aussie 1
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At the sides of winding trails around mountainsides in the interior of the USA where Indians travelled for thousands of years, later travelers were the Spanish Jesuits.
The ancient trails were permanent landmarks which suited them perfectly as markers for later returning to the site.
For their own mysterious reasons concerning the future of their order they buried the proceeds of much mining.
They averaged a depth of 9 feet to the top of their post hole caches.
I use the terminology “Posthole” as that is an accurate description of what they are.
It is only commonsense that when burying something that you don’t want anyone else to find, you will leave as little area as possible to the chance of exposure to a chance shovel. I estimate by looking down countless times that the caches are stacked in ingots at ingot width and about 4 foot in depth.
Usually only gold is stacked this way except the supposed Warrnamool
Mahogany ship stranded in a small bay during a violent storm and stranded by sand banks building up.
It had to be Spanish as the nearby paddocks are gridded with silver posthole deposits at a depth 9 feet and 10 foot apart.
The ship was about 60 foot in length and about 25 foot wide and is buried in an ancient bay behind 30-50 foot sand hills with raging surf on the beach front.
Around the coast of Australia in any convenient site which has a permanent landmark, much treasure has been buried.
Even the Californian coastline and its Islands are not spared as a burial ground for Jesuit deposits. Long range dowsing from photos or maps is a fact if you know the rules of dowsing and obey them 100%.
I have discovered with much digging that for every cache there are at least a dozen decoys and at least one and at times more, death traps.
With dowsing time again approaching following faithfully its 11 year cycle , now is time to dust off your ignorance of dowsing. Regards max
The ancient trails were permanent landmarks which suited them perfectly as markers for later returning to the site.
For their own mysterious reasons concerning the future of their order they buried the proceeds of much mining.
They averaged a depth of 9 feet to the top of their post hole caches.
I use the terminology “Posthole” as that is an accurate description of what they are.
It is only commonsense that when burying something that you don’t want anyone else to find, you will leave as little area as possible to the chance of exposure to a chance shovel. I estimate by looking down countless times that the caches are stacked in ingots at ingot width and about 4 foot in depth.
Usually only gold is stacked this way except the supposed Warrnamool
Mahogany ship stranded in a small bay during a violent storm and stranded by sand banks building up.
It had to be Spanish as the nearby paddocks are gridded with silver posthole deposits at a depth 9 feet and 10 foot apart.
The ship was about 60 foot in length and about 25 foot wide and is buried in an ancient bay behind 30-50 foot sand hills with raging surf on the beach front.
Around the coast of Australia in any convenient site which has a permanent landmark, much treasure has been buried.
Even the Californian coastline and its Islands are not spared as a burial ground for Jesuit deposits. Long range dowsing from photos or maps is a fact if you know the rules of dowsing and obey them 100%.
I have discovered with much digging that for every cache there are at least a dozen decoys and at least one and at times more, death traps.
With dowsing time again approaching following faithfully its 11 year cycle , now is time to dust off your ignorance of dowsing. Regards max