Started By
Message

12,000-year-old pyramid ruins uncovered off LA coast could be evidence of a lost city

Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:01 pm
Posted by stout
Porte du Lafitte
Member since Sep 2006
181309 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:01 pm
The Indian Mounds on campus are already recognised as the oldest known man-made structures in the Americas and are older than the Egyptian pyramids, but this guy claims that it isn't the only man-made structure from that time in LA.

This guy has been claiming for years that there was an ancient city with pyramids off the coast of LA that predates the Egyptian pyramids by 5-6000 years, like the Indian Mounds


quote:

A new Atlantis has emerged from the sands.

An amateur archaeologist has potentially made the discovery of a lifetime after uncovering the alleged ruins of a lost metropolis off Louisiana that predated modern US history.

“All I know is that someone built the city 12,000 years ago,” retired architect George Gelé claimed in a resurfaced WWLTV interview from 2022.

In the clip, Gelé claimed that for 50 years, he has been capturing sonar images of submerged structures off Chandeleur Islands, a chain of uninhabited barrier islands situated in the Gulf of Mexico around 50 miles east of New Orleans.

The mysterious buildings reportedly number in the hundreds and are located 30 feet below the water’s surface and are buried underneath an additional 100 feet of sediment.

The crown jewel of this so-called lost city is a so-called 280-foot pyramid jutting up from the ocean floor, which the architect claims emits a powerful electromagnetic signature that affects passing boats. In fact, he believes that these aquatic remnants are “geographically related to the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt.”

All together, these pieces form a former civilization, dubbed Crescentis, which dates back 11,700 years to the end of the last Ice Age when rising seas inundated the coast.

Gelé based his theory on mounds of mysterious granite stones found beneath Chandeleur Sound that are comprised of material not naturally found in Louisiana, leading the amateur archaeologist to believe that they were transported there.

“Somebody floated a billion stones down the Mississippi River and assembled them outside what would later become New Orleans,” declared the metropolitan forensics enthusiast, who has personally bankrolled and executed over 40 underwater research excursions in the region since 1974.

While this discovery has not been published in any peer-reviewed journals, Gelé is not the only one who things there’s something fishy going on beneath the sound.

Local shrimper Ricky Robin, who ferried Gelé to the site on numerous occasions, claims that his boat gadgets started behaving strangely when he passed over the location of the alleged pyramid.

“I thought right away it was pieces of the pyramid because it was right around where that compass spun,” the prawner claimed. “Everything will go out on your boat. All your electronics like you were in the Bermuda Triangle.”

He claimed that other anglers had also swooped up strange square rocks in their nets.

However, other researchers have suggested that the structures could have a simpler explanation.

A Texas A&M study from the 1980s asserted that the stones could’ve been ballast discarded by Spanish or French galleons so they wouldn’t be as cumbersome in the shallows, Ancient Origins reported.

Meanwhile, in 2011, archaeology professor Rob Mann postulated that the granite could be the remnants of an attempt to erect an artificial reef in the 1940s. Although he claimed that searching underwater wouldn’t yield any more answers.

However, Gelé is not convinced.

“This is a piece of architecture, this is not ballast,” he declared while examining one of the stones, which sported a groove that he claimed was a “rain gutter.”

“Whether or not they (the people of Crescentis) had somebody on their shoulder flew in with a UFO, I don’t know,” he said. “All I know is that they left a whole bunch of granite rocks out there.”






NY Post
This post was edited on 3/25/26 at 2:07 pm
Posted by longhorn22
Nicholls St. Fan
Member since Jan 2007
42927 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:02 pm to
huh
Posted by madmaxvol
Infinity + 1 Posts
Member since Oct 2011
22059 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:04 pm to
quote:

This guy has been claiming for years that there was an ancient city with pyramids off the coast of LA that predates the Egyptian pyramids by 5-6000 years, like the Indian Mounds




Not sure how...but this sounds like a Pyramid scheme to me.
Posted by kingbob
Sorrento, LA
Member since Nov 2010
70057 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:04 pm to
That looks like a hunk of discarded concrete from an artificial reef.
Posted by Traffic Circle
Down the Rabbit Hole
Member since Nov 2013
4983 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:04 pm to
Looks like sensationalism. I prefer the type involving scantily-dressed women.
Posted by stout
Porte du Lafitte
Member since Sep 2006
181309 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:05 pm to
Yeah, people think the guy is nuttier than squirrel turds, but somehow he got the NY Post to run an article about it
Posted by yaherrdme
The Place to Be
Member since Feb 2004
5929 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:13 pm to
quote:

Local shrimper Ricky Robin, who ferried Gelé to the site on numerous occasions, claims that his boat gadgets started behaving strangely when he passed over the location of the alleged pyramid.



I don't doubt shrimper Ricky Robin one bit .
Posted by PaperTiger
Ruston, LA
Member since Feb 2015
26473 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:15 pm to
quote:

dubbed Crescentis


Bravo
Posted by TheFonz
Somewhere in Louisiana
Member since Jul 2016
23084 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:18 pm to
quote:

“Somebody floated a billion stones down the Mississippi River and assembled them outside what would later become New Orleans,”


I wonder if dey wuz kangz n' shite, too.
Posted by Tiger Prawn
Member since Dec 2016
25644 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:19 pm to
Prehistoric baws were doing more than just smoking swisher sweets and jackin copper
This post was edited on 3/25/26 at 2:19 pm
Posted by andwesway
Zachary, LA
Member since Jun 2016
3160 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:20 pm to
Could it be the Lost Empire of the Kangz?
Posted by glassman
Next to the beer taps at Finn's
Member since Oct 2008
118111 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:21 pm to
quote:

I don't doubt shrimper Ricky Robin one bit .


I know him, his cousins and brothers. All fisherman who are customers of mine.
Posted by Kcrad
Diamondhead
Member since Nov 2010
66445 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:25 pm to
quote:

these pieces form a former civilization, dubbed Crescentis
"I bet you $20 I know where you got dem moccasins at".

-D'artivius, 22, 5000 years ago
Posted by bird35
Georgia
Member since Sep 2012
13559 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:26 pm to
So you are telling me the seas rose enough 12,000 years ago to cover a city under 230 feet of water.

I thought the sea rising was due to man made Global warming???
Posted by SuperSaint
Sorting Out OT BS Since '2007'
Member since Sep 2007
149632 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:27 pm to
Pharaoh Boudreaux
Posted by bayoudude
Member since Dec 2007
25892 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:27 pm to
I remember reading about this a few years back. Makes some sense that there would be buried civilizations off the current coast as during the ice age sea levels would have been several hundred feet lower extending our coastline by many miles
Posted by el Gaucho
He/They
Member since Dec 2010
58869 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:28 pm to
It seems like the historical record shows that there was a people that built a great civilization with magnificent structures all over the earth but they were forced to move as other people moved too close to them and started making trouble
Posted by Big Scrub TX
Member since Dec 2013
39564 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:34 pm to
quote:

The Indian Mounds on campus are already recognised as the oldest known man-made structures in the Americas
I don't think this is true. It's highly disputed.
Posted by Stealth Matrix
29°59'55.98"N 90°05'21.85"W
Member since Aug 2019
11511 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:44 pm to
quote:

The crown jewel of this so-called lost city is a so-called 280-foot pyramid jutting up from the ocean floor, which the architect claims emits a powerful electromagnetic signature that affects passing boats. In fact, he believes that these aquatic remnants are “geographically related to the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt.”

The Great Pyramids lie at 29.98°N latitude, the Chandeleur Islands lie between 30.04°N and 29.26°N. So at least some part of the islands lines up with the pyramids. Fun coincidence if nothing else.
Posted by cypresstiger
The South
Member since Aug 2008
13889 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:45 pm to
A Texas A&M study from the 1980s asserted that the stones could’ve been ballast discarded by Spanish or French galleons so they wouldn’t be as cumbersome in the shallows, Ancient Origins reported.

Meanwhile, in 2011, archaeology professor Rob Mann postulated that the granite could be the remnants of an attempt to erect an artificial reef in the 1940s. Although he claimed that searching underwater wouldn’t yield any more answers.
—-Here’s the truth
first pageprev pagePage 1 of 3Next pagelast page

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on X, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookXInstagram