Trovants spherical rocks and planetary rocks ancient industrial system

Trovants spherical rocks and planetary
rocks ancient industrial system
The shapes may represent ancient life forms or dinosaur droppings but most geological opinions classify them as natural phenomena However various questions and hypotheses remain suggesting they were formed by erosion or are rocks from large and small spherical planets that coalesced around a central axis through erosion or perhaps meteorites with small spherical structures chondrules embedded within believed to have formed in space in a planetary-like environment similar to Earth. These discoveries are reminiscent of the spherical rock formations found in the village of Podubravlje in Bosnia and the Yehliu Geopark in Taiwan famous tourist destinations known for their unique rock formations created by wind and sea erosion over millions of years.
Rock formations resembling planets are found in Wadi Tikofi, also known as the "Valley of the Planets," in the Libyan desert.
Another mystery is the discovery of large stone basins at the Sun Temple of King Niuserre in Abu Ghurab Egypt. Their exact purpose remains an archaeological enigma as they are made of hard rock such as granite or diorite requiring advanced technology for cutting and polishing. These stone basins are over 4,400 years old some archaeologists speculate they may have been used in religious rituals or as part of ancient industrial systems.Large stone basins located at the Sun Temple of King Niuserre in
Abu Ghurab Egypt
Mushroom-shaped rocks or fossils dissolved in groundwater have settled and accumulated around a central core. These sedimentary rocks are often mistaken for dinosaur eggs or fossils but they are actually a common geological phenomenon where rocks harden over the surrounding rocks forming large planetary-like spheres they are believed to have been created by ancient humans thousands of years ago for example this stone ball, discovered in the village of Podubravlje has a diameter of approximately 10 feet and weighs 35 tons it bears a striking resemblance to Tiramisu rocks or cake-shaped rocks found nearby from the DiquÃs culture. These spheres or planetary rocks while possibly man-made are not necessarily from other planets.
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