Azquester
Bronze Member
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2006
- Messages
- 1,736
- Reaction score
- 2,596
- Golden Thread
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- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
I think the very first thing that should be done is to walk the location by foot and see if what's seen in person matches what's shown on Google Earth. Whatever the season is that the GE image is taken is the same season someone should walk to those locations and see what's there.
Cuban, I did just that about three years ago when I first noticed them while looking at one of the only spots left down here that still had some claims open. That's when I went out in the field and found the plants lined up just like on the images. The same plants today my be gone as the stress on the bushes probably killed them off. I started noticing that veins running through out every known mining area had the plants changing color. But that was during the drought. We need an expert on desert plants that can confirm it. These early miners knew more about plant life then any modern prospector. Jesuit's I believe wrote the first colored books on plants a Polymath Priest. Maybe it has something to do with the Voynich Manuscript or Athanasius Kircher, Society of Jesus and the secret writing of plants.
