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		<title>The Project Avalon Community Forum - Unsolved Mysteries</title>
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			<title>Alien Mining of Earth</title>
			<link>https://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?131226-Alien-Mining-of-Earth&amp;goto=newpost</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 02 May 2026 00:58:56 GMT</pubDate>
			<description><![CDATA[This is one of three videos from The Severed Timeline (https://www.youtube.com/@TheSeveredTimeline) I've gone through in the last couple of days. It...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>This is one of three videos from <a href="https://www.youtube.com/@TheSeveredTimeline" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">The Severed Timeline</a> I've gone through in the last couple of days. It suggests the Sahara Desert is massive debris from mining. Scientist who have analyzed the sand claim it has been separated as if by a sifter. The composition doesn't match indigenous rock. There are thousands of examples of wall art showing herds of large animals in North Africa. It's claimed it has been a desert for some 6,000 years. The Romans around 2,000 years ago were supplies by that region. In comparison if the United States didn't have rules about strip mining, then there would be vast areas in the country torn asunder. The <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richat_Structure" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Richat Structure</a> or the Eye of Africa was pointed out as an unusual anomaly. Australia and the Grand Canyon were mentioned as other possible mining sites.<br />
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<b>The information in the below paragraph is not in the video. <br />
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In the Anunnaki story they came to earth to mine gold to repair their atmosphere and first started in the ocean. After the great floor new sources of gold were revealed. The <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sumerian_King_List" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Sumerian King List</a> goes back some 260,000 years. The flood happened during the reign of Ubara Tutu. In some ocean floor maps, you can see what appear to be paths as if some giant machine or ship skimmed material. North Africa could have been the dumping ground. What if that debris correlates to the time of a major space battle in our solar system and resources were removed from the planet.<br />
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Other <a href="https://projectavalon.net/forum4/search.php?searchid=37189798" target="_blank">threads</a> about the Sahara.<br />
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04/23/26 (29:37)<br />

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Source: <a href='http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7YGJ0xRv76w'>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7YGJ0xRv76w</a><br />
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			Six thousand years ago, the Sahara was green. Satellite imaging has confirmed it. The geological record has confirmed it. Ancient rock art carved into formations that now sit in the middle of one of the most hostile environments on the planet depicts rivers, cattle, swimming figures, and abundant wildlife. The Sahara was a living landscape — fertile, watered, and inhabited across its entire expanse. And then, in a geological instant, it wasn't. &#127807;<br />
In this video, we challenge the standard climate-shift explanation for the Sahara's transformation and examine an alternative framework that mainstream geology has never seriously engaged with — the possibility that what we call the Sahara Desert is not the product of natural desertification but the residual debris field of large-scale material extraction that stripped the surface of North Africa down to its present state. &#127964;&#65039; We trace the mineralogical composition of Saharan sand in detail — the quartz concentration, the feldspar ratios, the trace element signatures — and compare them against the rock compositions of the plateau and canyon formations that define the desert's edges. The sand matches the rock the way crushed material matches the formation it was removed from.<br />
We examine the Green Sahara period — the African Humid Period that ran from approximately 11,000 to 5,000 years ago — and ask what kind of event could transition an eleven-million-square-kilometer living landscape into a sea of processed granular material within the compressed timeframe the geological record actually shows. &#128208; Gradual climate shift produces gradual desertification — advancing edges, transitional zones, and a progressive drying that leaves a recognizable archaeological trail. What the Sahara shows instead is a relatively abrupt transition, a landscape that went from supporting dense human and animal populations to being essentially uninhabitable across most of its expanse within a period that geologists continue to debate and struggle to explain through climate mechanisms alone.<br />
We walk through the canyon and plateau systems that border the desert basin — the Ahaggar and Tibesti massifs, the Ennedi Plateau, the Gilf Kebir, the Fezzan region of Libya — and examine the same set of anomalies we've identified in the American Southwest. &#129704; Flat-topped mesas with vertical walls. Canyon profiles that step in consistent intervals rather than sloping through gradual erosion. Base formations conspicuously free of the debris that natural weathering should have deposited at their feet over millions of years. And surrounding all of them, stretching to the horizon in every direction, a sea of finely processed material in quantities that challenge every conventional explanation for where it came from and how it got there.<br />
We also look beneath the sand. &#128300; Radar satellite surveys have mapped an entire lost world under the Saharan surface — ancient river systems wider than the Nile, lake beds covering areas larger than modern European nations, and buried geological formations that tell the story of a landscape that was once something completely different from what sits above it. If the material that covered those formations was removed rather than simply redistributed by wind and time, the Sahara is not a natural desert. It is the exposed floor of the largest extraction operation ever conducted on the surface of this planet.<br />
The green world that existed here didn't just dry out. Something took the surface with it. &#127757;<br />
&#128218; Topics covered in this video: Green Sahara African Humid Period, Saharan sand mineralogy, Sahara formation mystery, Ahaggar Tibesti massifs, Ennedi Plateau geology, Gilf Kebir formations, Fezzan Libya geology, radar satellite Sahara subsurface, ancient river systems Sahara, large-scale material removal theory, desert debris field framework, abrupt desertification timeline, subterranean Saharan water systems, and the mineralogical relationship between Saharan sand and the canyon formations that border the desert basin.<br />
&#128172; A green continent-sized landscape turned into processed granular debris within a geologically compressed timeframe — what explanation fits the evidence better than gradual climate shift? Tell us below. &#128071;&#127757;
			
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