Last modified on 09/20/2011, 11:08 AM

Who could have dug this huge underground country?Go to L'étrange quête de l'Agartha Where do these cities come from, all connected together by tunnels, providing comfortGo to Isis d'Anatolie like water pipes, toilets, light shafts? And why the lower we go, the higher the ceilings of tunnels are? And when were built these mysterious troglodytes? These are questions which raise many more others ...

Turkey, Cappadocia, near Nevsehir, around -4000: "The first inhabitants of Anatolia, the Hittites, have dug houses in the soft rock of the cliffs in order to protect from the elements and to take refuge there in case of attack. Later, in the sixth century,From 642 BC, so in the 7th century. How difficult it is to date correctly! Go to L'excès rationaliste Rene Descartes pushing the defensive strategy to the extreme, the inhabitants have built entirely underground cities to escape the invasions of Persians and Arabs. There would be a hundred cave-dwelling villages in the rocky peaks of Cappadocia. You can only visit the underground cities of Nevsehir, Özhonak, Mazi, Kaymakli or Derinkuyu.
The underground city of Kaymakli is the most visited in this region. It stretches over several miles and has eight levels. The people could live independently for several months without betraying their presence. Nearby, the underground city of Derinkuyu is the largest one: it could accommodate more than 30,000 people on no fewer than 18 levels. Only the first eight have been explored." (source)Cappadocia, Ministry of Tourism of Turkey, Ankara, 1998 There is good reason for this: the lower levels are flooded with sediment that make them virtually impassable.
By themselves, these alluvial deposits show that the cities are prior to the Würm thaw,Click + obvious cause of the great floodGo to Le grand cataclysme as evidenced by so many mythsGo to L'histoire d'avant l'histoire around the world. The great city of Derinkuyu is certainly "the most interesting among the underground cities. It had a well 60 yards deep, which allowed the water supply, essential during a siege of several months. A tunnel about seven miles long connected Derinkuyu to Kaymakli." (source)Cappadocia, Ministry of Tourism of Turkey, Ankara, 1998 How did these mysterious troglodytic people live? Pretty good, it seems.


The underground cities, built or rather dug over several levels, included stables,If stables are prior to the Würm, so if they have more than 110,000 years of age, this would be evidence that animal domestication did not start 12,000 years ago, as commonly believed, but far before in the past warehouses, cellars, dormitories, churches and common rooms. Hallways and stairs allowed people to move from a dwelling to another. There was a ventilation system with large fireplaces and a system of inlet and draining of water! In total, a population of 200,000 people would have lived in these cities, or rather in this buried country: for all the cities were apparently linked by an underground system. Cappadocia would be a real Swiss cheese.

Miles of tunnels, acres of rooms and stairs, thousands of workers, millions of hours of work. Who dug all that, and for what purpose? The official version claims that these underground cities were dug by the Hittites from -4000. But why would they have dug all those mountains, without an urgent reason? "To protect from the elements" is the official answer. What elements? In -4000, the ice age of WürmClick + to Ice Age was finished ages ago. Even worse: from -9000, the thaw has caused countless floods.Go to Le grand cataclysme
These floods are completely incompatible with an underground habitat: the inhabitants would have been drownedGo to De l'eau partout for sure. The rest of the official version, much less realistic, says that troglodytic works and underground levels have been enlarged and extended by the Christians, forced to live hidden to protect from the Islamic upsurge of 642. It is true that there are murals with Christian motifs, but they are located at higher levels, above the surface, which shows little desire to hide.
"Something is not right, notes Andrew Collins. The normal reaction of a community fearful of being crushed by an armed invader would be to reach safer areas, what made many Christians who established in Eastern Europe, especially in Greece. It was crazy to dig a hole in the ground and hide there in the hope that the persecutors would eventually leave." Especially since, as we said, instead of burying themselves deep like moles, Christians have only occupied the levels located above the surface.
Once again, the official versions show a deep lack of seriousness and conscience.Go to Croire sans y croire Against what cataclysm could man have dug all these burrows? The Andean Cities of the PeaksGo to Cités des cimes protected against the ravages of raging waters. But the underground cities of Turkey would have not been useful to protect against floods, because their inhabitants would have been drowned like rats in a hole. On the contrary, they could have promoted the survival during the last ice age. The underground structures are indeed very little sensitive to surface temperature variations.

From the third underground level, it reigns a constant temperature of 11°C, which can effectively resist the surface frost. As the one who prevailed in this part of the world during the last Ice AgeClick + to Ice Age for example ... According to Omer Demir who serves as curator of these cities, the building may date from before the last Ice Age, ie more than 100,000 years ago. After the myth of Ice Age Noah,Go to Noé des glaces here is another clue of the presence of developed men in a very distant past.
Because these galleries had to be dug before the surface frost renders the rock too hard, so before the beginning of WürmClick + 110,000 years ago! It had to be that a "god"Go to Usurpateurs alerted the first men to take shelter in this place. And so that a "god" be there to guide them, it had to be that a civilizationGo to Typologie des civilisations had time to develop, say several thousand years before the flood, what brings us closer to -150,000. Yet that date is that of the official appearance of modern man.
You are so wrong, gentlemen Paleo-Anthropologists and you narrow-minded disciples of an imprudent Darwin,Go to page man has never been an ape's cousin!