I
iseidon
Guest
Very interesting information related to the remains of trees (Taxodium or Sequioxylon) under a layer of earth (sand, black ground/soil or chernozem and coal) in Hungary. They were discovered during the development of a lignite quarry near Bükkábrány (+ hun; more information in Hungarian; interesting place name). The material is not mine. I will highlight only the points about the trees (and which seem interesting to me).
Bükkábrány mummified forest.
47,8833376, 20,7178646
Bükkábrány, Hungary
As is very often the case, I am very surprised that there is no information about it on the site. About trees (of any kind) underground, I didn't find anything either. Perhaps I wasn't looking hard enough.
If this is not an operation (mid-2000s) to attract tourists to Hungary, and the real archaeological fact (apparently, it is, because there is very little hype around this topic), then you will understand the logic of some of my posts. Here and here (I advise you to watch the branches in their entirety to understand the context). I have known about these trees for a long time. So I thought this information was known to most visitors to the site. That's why (in my opinion) it's important to look under the ground (foundations, subway tunnels, etc). When you look at the pictures in this post, you will understand the depth to which you need to look to see the traces of ancient civilizations (of course, this data should be correlated with the relief of the area under study).
All of the original posts are in Russian (from rodline.livejournal.com):
Fact about the Flood. Taxodium.
Miklós KÁZMÉR: The forest from the 60-meter deep quarry is sanded to the north.
El ahuehuete. Taxodium from Mexico.
I am sure there are posts in other languages as well, but these will suffice (to familiarize you with the topic).
Also, I would like to thank those scientists, archaeologists, and journalists who reported these findings. I am sure that if it were not for them, the mining company (or more precisely, its investors) would have destroyed (or secretly transferred to private collections and museums) these trees and we would never have heard about them (as is most likely happening; especially in Northern Russia and Scandinavia, Northern Canada and Alaska, Inland China, Central Asia, Africa, Antarctica, Inland Australia, etc; which are difficult for an ordinary person without proper access).
Also, I am posting here screenshots from a report published in 2008 by the Hungarian scientist Miklós Kázmér (PDF file also attached to the post; also, you can download the file on ResearchGate).
Also, there is a Hungarian documentary on YouTube (with English subtitles).
In Hungary, at the bottom of an open sand pit, four to eight-meter stumps of, as several reports indicate, marsh cypress trees were found. Remarkably, the preservation of these stumps is perfect and, at the same time, the wood is not hardened.
In Mexico, these trees still exist. One of the local names for this tree is "ahuehuete" (this is exactly what most Russian-speaking people will think when they see this tree, regardless of their cultural level).
UPD. A forum thread in which this topic was (slightly) touched upon.
Bükkábrány mummified forest.
47,8833376, 20,7178646
Bükkábrány, Hungary
As is very often the case, I am very surprised that there is no information about it on the site. About trees (of any kind) underground, I didn't find anything either. Perhaps I wasn't looking hard enough.
If this is not an operation (mid-2000s) to attract tourists to Hungary, and the real archaeological fact (apparently, it is, because there is very little hype around this topic), then you will understand the logic of some of my posts. Here and here (I advise you to watch the branches in their entirety to understand the context). I have known about these trees for a long time. So I thought this information was known to most visitors to the site. That's why (in my opinion) it's important to look under the ground (foundations, subway tunnels, etc). When you look at the pictures in this post, you will understand the depth to which you need to look to see the traces of ancient civilizations (of course, this data should be correlated with the relief of the area under study).
All of the original posts are in Russian (from rodline.livejournal.com):
Fact about the Flood. Taxodium.
Miklós KÁZMÉR: The forest from the 60-meter deep quarry is sanded to the north.
El ahuehuete. Taxodium from Mexico.
I am sure there are posts in other languages as well, but these will suffice (to familiarize you with the topic).
Also, I would like to thank those scientists, archaeologists, and journalists who reported these findings. I am sure that if it were not for them, the mining company (or more precisely, its investors) would have destroyed (or secretly transferred to private collections and museums) these trees and we would never have heard about them (as is most likely happening; especially in Northern Russia and Scandinavia, Northern Canada and Alaska, Inland China, Central Asia, Africa, Antarctica, Inland Australia, etc; which are difficult for an ordinary person without proper access).
Also, I am posting here screenshots from a report published in 2008 by the Hungarian scientist Miklós Kázmér (PDF file also attached to the post; also, you can download the file on ResearchGate).
Also, there is a Hungarian documentary on YouTube (with English subtitles).
Just in case, I'm posting alternate links to videos (in case the main video won't be available). Telegram. VK.
In Hungary, at the bottom of an open sand pit, four to eight-meter stumps of, as several reports indicate, marsh cypress trees were found. Remarkably, the preservation of these stumps is perfect and, at the same time, the wood is not hardened.
In Mexico, these trees still exist. One of the local names for this tree is "ahuehuete" (this is exactly what most Russian-speaking people will think when they see this tree, regardless of their cultural level).
UPD. A forum thread in which this topic was (slightly) touched upon.
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