22 Comments
- Burento, on 04/13/2008, -1/+14They actually say these might predate the Egyptian pyramids and be the oldest civilization on Earth. It does get the mind going though...
- Jookly, on 04/13/2008, -2/+12I love how the scientist quoted immediately says they are geological without any investigation. It seems like some people forget about the scientific process and just love to talk.
The only way to possibly learn from these is to study them, no assumptions. - AManWithNoName, on 04/13/2008, -0/+10Did...Did that video just make a golden sun reference?
- michelsonmorley, on 04/13/2008, -0/+9Link to national geographic article on it:
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/09/07 ... - h0ser, on 04/13/2008, -0/+9The video was funny. It was like a foreign person speaking in writing.
- vegassculptor, on 04/13/2008, -2/+6Great article Sied! I'd never heard of this before. Doesn't look natural to me.
- macwac, on 04/14/2008, -2/+5If you read the entire article and followed the links to the other articles it said that the guy who claimed it to be geological actually dove on the site and compared it to other sites that he had seen previously and he gave a reasoning behind these sharp cut corners and how they are formed. Its even in the video. So it is based on scientific study not on babble. However; there are other things that can be questioned such as possible characters engraved into the walls.
- Jaliyl, on 04/14/2008, -0/+3I saw this a little less than a year ago on the history channel.
- cococooky, on 04/14/2008, -0/+3Stuff it. I edited my comment and forgot to re-paste the link - I really wish Digg would fix this bug.
http://www.computerandvideogames.com/article.php?i ... - ThePirateParty, on 04/14/2008, -1/+3I can't believe there are people who think these are natural...
- inactive, on 04/14/2008, -0/+1"...hieroglyphs were found on the walls of the pyramid of women squirting eels out their anus...that's how we knew it was Japanese."
Makes sense to me! - avengingturnip, on 04/14/2008, -1/+2If only these ancient peoples had realized they could have implemented massive government controls and carbon trading programs, they could have stopped their own global warming and those pyramids would be on dry land today.
- cococooky, on 04/14/2008, -1/+2It's possible that part of Assassins Creed 2 will take place in Yonaguni.
http://www.computerandvideogames.com/article.php?i ... - tomjm5000, on 04/14/2008, -0/+1Who knows what type of ancient cave naruto we'll find inside!
- Apoy, on 04/14/2008, -1/+1There's something with the Japanese that makes them weird and interesting at the same time.
- insomniacal, on 04/14/2008, -1/+1The original Natural Geographic article has much more in-depth (pun intended) information:
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/09/07 ... - wtcny, on 04/14/2008, -0/+0Water pyramides...seems that i have already seen it ..mmm..somewhere at National Geographics channel. Nice pics :)
- macwac, on 04/14/2008, -1/+1Intriguing, seems more man-made then created by nature.. then again i have seen a lot of natural formations that look man made.
- jeremyduffy, on 04/14/2008, -2/+1Here's the real link. Might as well bypass the middleman blog of it. Not to mention that "slideshow posing as a video" gave me a headache.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/09/07 ... - mikesbaker, on 04/14/2008, -3/+1This is still a natural formation same as it was last time it was on digg.
- dupswapdrop, on 04/13/2008, -3/+1Hello customer service do you have a owners manual for under water pyramids?
- OneManArmy, on 04/14/2008, -4/+1Worst. Use. Of. Starwars. Text. Ever.


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