Overview
Baalbek sits on one of the most powerful sound intersections in the Middle East. The 1,000+ tonne foundation stones are now thought to have been levitated into position using very powerful low frequency standing waves of sound – the same frequencies that emanate from the Earth's inner core. This is acoustic levitation on a scale that makes modern laboratory experiments seem trivial. The site demonstrates that our ancestors possessed knowledge of sound technology that we are only beginning to rediscover.
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History, Archaeology & Significance
Baalbek is an ancient Phoenician city in the Bekaa Valley of Lebanon containing some of the largest and best-preserved Roman temple ruins in the world. However, beneath the Roman structures lies a massive stone platform – the Trilithon – consisting of three stones each weighing over 1,000 tonnes, fitted together with extraordinary precision. A fourth stone, the 'Stone of the Pregnant Woman' weighing approximately 1,200 tonnes, remains in a nearby quarry partially cut from bedrock. No satisfactory explanation exists for how these stones were transported and placed with ancient technology.
Rory's Field Notes
A non-photoshopped stone carefully carved from solid rock to place in a wall alongside three other similar sized stones. It is over 1000 tons in weight. It is now thought that these were levitated there using standing waves of sound – acoustic levitation. To lift rocks of this weight takes much more powerful sound waves. This is exactly what can be found coming from our inner core. Pre-megalithic foundation stones over 600 tons – most likely over 12,000 years old, from the previous advanced civilisation who knew ways to move stone that we still do not know today. Similar to Temple Mount in Jerusalem which has the same energetic configuration of a 4th Order node.
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