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Lost city remains in the waters off Chandeleur Islands ?

Posted on 8/4/23 at 10:31 pm
Posted by TutHillTiger
Mississippi Alabama
Member since Sep 2010
43700 posts
Posted on 8/4/23 at 10:31 pm
LINK

A self-proclaimed amateur archaeologist professes that mysterious granite stones found over the years by fishermen near the uninhabited Chandeleur Islands, located 50 miles east of New Orleans in the United States, are actually architectural artifacts from a 12,000-year-old lost city. Having visited the site 44 times, George Gelé, a retired architect, is convinced that he has found the remains of a submerged city predating the ancient Inca, Maya and Aztec civilizations of the Americas.

Even more startlingly, he claims that there is a pyramid in the granite city, which he has named “Crescentis”, that is related to the Great Pyramid at Giza ! The oldest of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World , the Great Pyramid is located in Greater Cairo in Egypt. “What’s down there are hundreds of buildings that are covered with sand and silt and that are geographically related to the Great Pyramid at Giza. Somebody floated a billion stones down the Mississippi River and assembled them outside what would later become New Orleans ,” Gelé told CBS affiliate WWL-TV.

The Building Blocks of the Lost City of “Crescentis”
So what exactly has Gelé built his theory of a lost city on? While its foundations may be weak, the building stones are solid enough. Local fishermen have for years been talking about netting strange square rocks near the Chandeleur Islands. Granite in the area is certainly something that requires explanation, given that it isn’t found naturally in Louisiana or Mississippi, reports the Sun.
Gelé, who has taken 44 trips to the site over nearly 50 years, has produced underwater sonar images of what he is convinced are discernible ruins of major buildings. These, he claims, include a large pyramid. “All I know is somebody built a city 12,000 years ago and it’s stuck out in Chandeleur. Whether or not they had someone on their shoulder who flew in with a UFO, I don’t know. All I know is they left a whole lot of granite rocks out there,” he said according to WWL-TV.

A Lost City? Or Are There More Mundane Explanations?
Though he has his adherents, many treat Gelé’s claims with skepticism, subscribing to explanations that are as of now less of a stretch of imagination than the theory of a submerged city near the Chandeleur Islands . And there are several of these rather more realistic explanations. One is from a late 1980s Texas A&M study which claims the granite blocks originate from old shipwrecks or ballast stones thrown overboard by Spanish and French ships to lighten their load as they entered shallow waters.

In fact, Gelé himself made a presentation in 2014 along similar lines. There he explored possibilities of the stone piles being from a construction dump or a build up from several shipwrecks. LSU archaeology professor Rob Mann told local newspaper the Advocate in 2011 that he believed the granite slabs originated from an abortive attempt to build an artificial reef. The state’s archaeologist told the same newspaper that while he agreed that barge loads of stones seemed to have been dumped there, the reasons were not clear.
Five Legendary Lost Cities that have Never Been Found
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The jury is still out on whether there is any substance to Gelé’s claims of a 12,000-year-old lost city, or whether the more commonplace explanations are closer to the truth. Certainly, Gelé’s hypothesis is more romantic. But until future dives, solar technology or satellite imaging help him put some proof out there, he will find it difficult to find serious scientific backing for his lost city.

Seems to be perfect site for LiDAR or something.













I have caught fish off these rocks and never really thought much about them and assumed they were dumped there for some reason. They had a section on this on the proof is out there tonight and they said the amount of rocks out there would be equal to ballast of 3 or 4 dozen ships so that’s not likely and no record of anyone dumped anywhere near that amount of stone out there and not really the right area for a fishing reef. (Although I liked it as one)

Anyone know anything about this?
Posted by TutHillTiger
Mississippi Alabama
Member since Sep 2010
43700 posts
Posted on 8/4/23 at 10:33 pm to
And the Faggies are the same mfers that claimed hurricane Katrina was a low level cat 3 hurricane that couldn’t have possibly destroyed any buildings etc. (juries didn’t buy it )
Posted by soccerfüt
Location: A Series of Tubes
Member since May 2013
65611 posts
Posted on 8/4/23 at 10:35 pm to
Yeah, that’s where folks would have built a city 12,000 years ago.

Off Baptiste Collette.
Posted by slutiger5
Parroquias de Florida
Member since May 2007
10633 posts
Posted on 8/4/23 at 10:38 pm to
Great post! Should be more down there if this true.
Posted by BeepNode
Lafayette
Member since Feb 2014
10005 posts
Posted on 8/4/23 at 10:40 pm to
This is some dumb shite.
Posted by fightin tigers
Downtown Prairieville
Member since Mar 2008
73680 posts
Posted on 8/4/23 at 10:41 pm to
Ballast unloading spot.

Confirmed and recorded by actual archeologists.

Dude is a hack at a major level.
Posted by Shexter
Prairieville
Member since Feb 2014
13867 posts
Posted on 8/4/23 at 10:41 pm to
Why not? We have Poverty Point in N. Louisiana.
Has that much erosion occurred in 12,000 years?
Did we have oil field baws cutting up the marsh with canals 12,000 years ago?
Posted by PacoPicopiedra
1 Ft. Above Sea Level
Member since Apr 2012
1153 posts
Posted on 8/4/23 at 10:54 pm to
Most likely the dumping of ballast is the more rational explanation. Here's a photo of granite ballast blocks used on the extended man made jetty in Texas City.

Posted by shutterspeed
MS Gulf Coast
Member since May 2007
63260 posts
Posted on 8/4/23 at 10:57 pm to
quote:

he has named “Crescentis”


I know that dude. Lives in the Lower 9th.
Posted by SuperSaint
Sorting Out OT BS Since '2007'
Member since Sep 2007
140462 posts
Posted on 8/4/23 at 11:01 pm to
quote:

Why not? We have Poverty Point in N. Louisiana. Has that much erosion occurred in 12,000 years? Did we have oil field baws cutting up the marsh with canals 12,000 years ago?
last glacial Maximum didn't ran until 14,000 years or so ago. Sea levels were much lower
Posted by gizmothepug
Louisiana
Member since Apr 2015
6427 posts
Posted on 8/4/23 at 11:11 pm to
Who knows what happened 12,000 years ago around present day Louisiana? The people that knew aren’t here anymore and the people trying to figure it out should get support, not hate. People that keep pretending that everything just magically started happening a couple thousand years ago need to sit down and do a little math.
Posted by Jim Rockford
Member since May 2011
98178 posts
Posted on 8/4/23 at 11:17 pm to
Posted by DMAN1968
Member since Apr 2019
10144 posts
Posted on 8/4/23 at 11:37 pm to
quote:

They said tonight almost impossible to be just ballast because would be amount for 3 to 4 ships which is too many.


quote:

Somebody floated a billion stones down the Mississippi River and assembled them outside what would later become New Orleans ,” Gelé told CBS affiliate WWL-TV.


Posted by notiger1997
Metairie
Member since May 2009
58120 posts
Posted on 8/4/23 at 11:47 pm to
The water isn’t crazy deep in that area. If half of what he’s claiming is true, there would be a hell a lot of more information about this from others. They would have been down there with advanced equipment years ago and published papers about it.
This post was edited on 8/4/23 at 11:49 pm
Posted by sqerty
AP
Member since May 2022
4930 posts
Posted on 8/4/23 at 11:52 pm to
The native americans had a resort down there. A hurricane wiped it out.
Posted by xXLSUXx
New Orleans, LA
Member since Oct 2010
10306 posts
Posted on 8/5/23 at 12:04 am to
You keep saying "3 to 4 ships" but that doesn't seem like very much to me?
Posted by ShoeBang
Member since May 2012
19356 posts
Posted on 8/5/23 at 12:41 am to
quote:

Anyone know anything about this?


No but if he doesn’t call it Yatlantis he is missing a huge opportunity
Posted by Jake88
Member since Apr 2005
68140 posts
Posted on 8/5/23 at 12:50 am to
quote:

 Somebody floated a billion stones down the Mississippi River
According to a couple posters on this site this was impossible and had to be done by aliens building star forts.
This post was edited on 8/5/23 at 12:55 am
Posted by BigBinBR
Baton Rouge
Member since Mar 2023
4085 posts
Posted on 8/5/23 at 12:55 am to
quote:

LSU archaeology professor Rob Mann told local newspaper the Advocate in 2011 that he believed the granite slabs originated from an abortive attempt to build an artificial reef


I’m sure Mann then complained how someone spent money on the artificial reef while he still has to vacuum his office with a dirt devil.
Posted by Tarps99
Lafourche Parish
Member since Apr 2017
7398 posts
Posted on 8/5/23 at 3:52 am to
quote:

Has that much erosion occurred in 12,000 years?


One plausible explanation could be the theory that sea level was much lower 12,000 years ago because of an ice age. Once the ice age was over and ice started melting and the simple fact that you are on the main drainage line of continental North America, it was time to abandon the city.

With the low water levels from the Mississippi River, any one notice the water a little more clear around Grand Isle, and the tides running a little more lower than average?
This post was edited on 8/5/23 at 3:58 am
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