THE CITY “IMPOSSIBLE” The mysterious city of Nan Madol lies in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, more than 1,000 km from the nearest coast

The mysterious city of Nan Madol lies in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, more than 1,000 km from the nearest coast. It’s a metropolis built in the middle of nowhere. Certain unexplained aspects of this mysterious city are leaving researchers perplexed. The walls of Nan Madol are rising under the sea. Some of the blocks used weigh up to 40 tons.


It’s impossible to build walls under the sea. Therefore Nan Madol must have been higher than the sea when it was built. But according to geologists, the island on which Nan Madol is located has never sunk due to phenomena such as Bradyseism, as other towns located below sea level (for example, the ancient Siponto in the Pittles).

But then how did the sea cover Nan Madol? Obviously, if the island didn’t sink, it’s the sea that rose. But Nan Madol is not bathed in a small sea, like the Mediterranean. Nan Madol in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. To lift a giant like the Pacific Ocean, even from a few meters, it takes an impressive mass of water. Where is all this water coming from?


The last time the Pacific Ocean rose anyhow (we’re talking over 100 meters), it was after the last thaw, 14,000 years ago, when the ice covering most of the Earth melted. The melting of ice as large as entire continents has given the oceans the mass of water needed to elevate them. So Nan Madol might have been partially submerged by the ocean at that time. But saying that would be like saying Nan Madol is over 14,000 years old. For many this is unacceptable, which is why you can read on Wikipedia that Nan Madol was built in the 2nd century AD. -C. by the Health Workers. But that’s just the date of the oldest human remains found on the island, not the date of its construction.


And how did the builders manage to transport the 100,000+ tons of volcanic rock “across the sea” to build Nan Madol’s hundred islands? Nan Madol is actually not on land, but in the sea, like Venice. And here again, there is a mysterious fact. As he can see in the video, all the rocks on which Nan Madol is built are “magnetic rocks”. When the scholar approaches his compass to the rock, the rock goes away. Does the magnetism of the rock have anything to do with the transport methods used for Nan Madol?

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