Walking Megaliths

Recently on television, experts showed images of moving stones. Many considered it a miracle, others saw it as an impossibility. It made us take a closer look at this mystery. Despite many years of research, scientists have not been able to explain how societies without advanced technology, machinery, or electric lifts could have built megalithic structures.

The gigantic constructions in Egypt, Iraq, Easter Island, England, and the structures of the Incas and Aztecs are all connected by a common story. In all the cultures that created these massive constructions, at some point the stones reportedly moved on their own from quarries to the locations where they were meant to stand. They moved, driven by some kind of invisible energy. It occurred in specific places, at certain times, and with particular incantations. Until now, all of these stories were classified as fairy tales — unjustly.

Two American geologists who were studying a dried-up salt lake near the entrance to the famous Death Valley in the United States suddenly noticed trails carved into the flat ground of clay and sand. At the ends of these trails stood massive stones. It looked as though something had been pushing them along the flat terrain — just like that.

Local inhabitants had already been talking about the walking stones long before 1968, but scientists had dismissed the stories as jokes and the topic was forgotten. However, Sharp and Carey took it seriously. They marked the positions of the 25 largest stones with metal posts and started monitoring what would happen...

At first, the rocks didn’t move at all. But when the scientists left after three months and returned half a year later, they found that the stones had moved, leaving behind clear tracks. One had shifted several hundred meters to the north and then turned south. Others had "traveled" even several kilometers. Sometimes entire groups moved; other times, just one stone set off on its journey.

Since the rocks mostly moved through Death Valley in winter, the geologists concluded that the cause might be pieces of ice that form at the turn of winter and spring, which then push the rocks as they break up. It seemed as if the rocks were moving by their own force. So the scientists surrounded the stones with metal posts to prevent ice chunks from pushing them. Yet the stones kept moving. And scientists still couldn’t determine what force was causing them to “walk.”

Even stranger is the fact that no one has ever actually witnessed a stone in motion, despite all the observation efforts.

There remains only one possibility: the rocks are moved by some type of electromagnetic or gravitational force, or a specific kind of underground radiation. But measurements have shown nothing. And the rocks, defying all physical laws, continued to move. But only in that specific place. Could it be that the right conditions only exist there? Is it a natural ability of our planet? Or could this force be triggered by creating suitable conditions?

Is it possible that ancient cultural legends contain a grain of truth? Perhaps priests of ancient civilizations knew the secret of such power spots and were able to use them to build massive megalithic structures. Then, stories of walking statues would be a kind of “report” on the forces of nature.

Even we today use steam and electricity — (Nikola Tesla reportedly stuck bulbs into the ground after a storm and they lit up, which seemed miraculous to many). Moreover, in Tibet, just a few decades ago, monks were said to move multi-ton stones using the sound of trumpets, and there is a recorded account of this.

Ancient knowledge has simply vanished in the mists of history.