• Which the release of FS2020 we see an explosition of activity on the forun and of course we are very happy to see this. But having all questions about FS2020 in one forum becomes a bit messy. So therefore we would like to ask you all to use the following guidelines when posting your questions:

    • Tag FS2020 specific questions with the MSFS2020 tag.
    • Questions about making 3D assets can be posted in the 3D asset design forum. Either post them in the subforum of the modelling tool you use or in the general forum if they are general.
    • Questions about aircraft design can be posted in the Aircraft design forum
    • Questions about airport design can be posted in the FS2020 airport design forum. Once airport development tools have been updated for FS2020 you can post tool speciifc questions in the subforums of those tools as well of course.
    • Questions about terrain design can be posted in the FS2020 terrain design forum.
    • Questions about SimConnect can be posted in the SimConnect forum.

    Any other question that is not specific to an aspect of development or tool can be posted in the General chat forum.

    By following these guidelines we make sure that the forums remain easy to read for everybody and also that the right people can find your post to answer it.

I want to so bad... heh heh..

If we're talking about strange things on Google earth which archeologists have used to locate possible digs, I found a grid pattern that looks like the remains of man made roads just south east of the Canary Islands, over 10,000 feet deep, right where Plato said Atlantis was. Also in Quebec you can see the remnants of a large meteor impact crater which struck, according to geologists and astronomers, approximately around the time that Plato said Atlantis was inundated with water. This would have been when the great ice shelves were still in North America. It could also explain the disappearance of the Clovis people.
 
If we're talking about strange things on Google earth which archeologists have used to locate possible digs

I like to roam around on Mars in Google Earth. Though now, they have 'fuzzied' it up and they blur out things. Someone found a base on Mars that looks to be using large tubes, joined together, and has shacks along its sides and dirt roads emminating from it in 4 different directions. There has been talk that we have a multi national base at Mars, but that its much much larger then a simple surface base; bunker, etc. The small surface base though was actually big.
 
I like to roam around on Mars in Google Earth. Though now, they have 'fuzzied' it up and they blur out things. Someone found a base on Mars that looks to be using large tubes, joined together, and has shacks along its sides and dirt roads emminating from it in 4 different directions. There has been talk that we have a multi national base at Mars, but that its much much larger then a simple surface base; bunker, etc. The small surface base though was actually big.
Bill, if you don't have this free software, get it but be prepared to be engrossed in it for several hours or days. http://www.worldwidetelescope.org/
 
I found a grid pattern that looks like the remains of man made roads just south east of the Canary Islands, over 10,000 feet deep, right where Plato said Atlantis was. Also in Quebec you can see the remnants of a large meteor impact crater which struck, according to geologists and astronomers, approximately around the time that Plato said Atlantis was inundated with water. This would have been when the great ice shelves were still in North America. It could also explain the disappearance of the Clovis people.

https://www.google.de/search?q=google+earth+grid+pattern




Also:
http://twistedsifter.com/2014/02/50-amazing-finds-on-google-earth/
(#29 is not worth the money)


The creepiest thing to hunt for on GE are visible shipwrecks. Not the ones in boneyards, but the half submerged ones.
https://www.google.com/maps/place/4...!1s0x0:0x0!8m2!3d45.255278!4d-81.680556?hl=en
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweepstakes_(schooner)

And speaking of shipwrecks:
http://www.lovethesepics.com/2012/09/48-eerily-intriguing-shipwrecks/

Beats image artifacts and a vivid imagination by miles!
 
Back
Top