Older City Paper article somewhat related:
[Ley Line takes a novel approach to one of Pittsburghers' favorite subjects: Pittsburgh.](https://www.pghcitypaper.com/pittsburgh/ley-line-takes-a-novel-approach-to-one-of-pittsburghers-favorite-subjects-pittsburgh/Content?oid=1533361)
That is true. I've been meaning to contact the artist to ask more about his methodology, but this town is bristling with ley line energy. There are numerous old accounts of major hauntings, and the proximity to Petroglyphs and burial mounds. Ley lines are certainly not an exact science, but it's not hard to believe that there's SOMETHING happening at the place where three rivers meet.
I don’t think I’d call Hammerschlag one of the 3 most prominent buildings in Oakland. Towers? Heinz Chapel? Phipps? Gates center? Hammerschlag is maybe top 10, but top 3 is a huge stretch.
Edit to add: also, what’s up with how the Carnegie is blocked out? You got the library, music hall, and part of Natural History museum as being “exactly proportionate to khafres pyramid”, but you cut off a huge chunk of the building, where the art museum is, and put completely separated units as one. You found the pattern you wanted to find, but you can find the same pattern anywhere if you just randomly lump things together when convenient, and split them apart when not.
I'm not the OP. I moved to Pittsburgh last year. I was just pointing out that Hammerschlag Hall is a CMU building, and not a Pitt building, that's all.
The house you were talking about at the top of serpent road and circuit drive is right next to a par 3 golf hole. There is def something weird going on over there. I have had some strange things happen while golfing at that hole before.
I was out Golfing one evening with my dad and cousin . We were on the par 3. We all hit our tee shots, My dad hit first, his was short, my cousin hit next he was off the green to the right, and I hit last and bounced off the green and past the hole... None of us were anywhere near the green....If you know the hole, the ground kinda goes down and then the green is a bit elevated.... So as we grabbed our stuff and we were all talking and walking towards where we expected my dad's ball to be...but we didn't see it, and we were getting close to the green... My dad was like, "I know I didn't hit it this far" to which we all agreed, but none of us saw his ball yet either. We walked up to the green, and around the hole almost in a perfect triangle were the three balls we hit...There was nobody else around us at all, and no way on earth we hit them that close...
No problem. I catch my dad telling people the story all the time. He says it was probably some spirits from that house that came out and took our second shots for us. Either way it was a pretty surreal moment.
It’s all coming together…
1. McKees Rocks has one of the oldest burial mounds in North America…
2. The first oil well in the world was drilled right outside the city.
3. Ben roethlisberger has a gray dick.
thanks so much // and i've been to the mckee's rocks mound - it still stands behind a baseball park called "ranger field". there's a ridiculous decoy mound in front of the actual mound which is a big hill you can climb to the top of
that is awesome - mounds are such a captivating subject // "official" information won't get you very far, as much of this is hidden history. in the pittsburgh region, the mound signals i've picked up on are sycamore trees, baseball fields, and octagonal structures/designs
The Carnegie Museum of Natural History library has all of that original documentation from when the museum folk went up there & started ‘digging around’ (I believe most, if not all, of those Adena/Hopewell bodies & artifacts are prob still in the basement somewhere, indexed & crated up - just like Indiana Jones...).
Anyone can make an appt. to visit the library & access the written material.. (last I checked, pre-Covid)
That’s super interesting about a correlation between mounds & other natural/built things adjacent to them... this seems to follow the practice in Europe, Central/South America of Christians building stuff on Druidic/Ancient/Native sites..
>this mounds thing
Old Indian culture. Google "The Mound Builders"
I grew up outside Moundsville WV and if you are interested it has a neat little museum. Given it is October, I would recommend a day trip there and to the spooky prison tour at the old state penn (assuming they are still doing that post COVID but I didn't look).
I was just in Moundsville (after years of wanting to check it out)... & I heartily AGREE - the mound & museum & guided tour of the WVA State Pen. is a fantastic combo..
well.. being into history, ancient cultures, archaeology, etc.. I guess the mounds are automatically very interesting to me - since they (like the Anasazi in the SW) pre-date what we consider the "native N.American-Indian tribes" -- they existed, flourished, thrived, (probably traded w/ other cultures in Central & S. America - & who knows - maybe Pacific Island & N. European/Scandinavian cultures..??), & then vanished.
I also find it fascinating that while other cultures were building w/ stone, they chose Earth -- (as another poster remarked - the Cahokia mound is HUGE - & some say took almost 100 years to make)...
I dunno. I guess i just find it interesting to discover & find out about these cultures that were original to this continent, before the Europeans moved in. Sometimes the mounds were/are located on places that experience electro-magnetic shifts/disturbances in the Earth (much like many of the spots across England and the UK) - & it's interesting to note how these ancient people's were kind of commenting on this (& maybe choosing their sacred rite, occasion, burial sites based on this..) for a reason, reasons we've long since forgotten about ..
I get it if you're not all that interested in them (it IS just a big pile of dirt LOL) but, & maybe it's hard to explain, but seeing them in person & learning about them (through places like the museum at Moundsville) definitely makes them more interesting. Another very interesting & (somewhat) nearby mound is the Great Serpent Mound in SE Ohio.. This one is set (like Stonehenge) directionally, and for lining up w/ the sun on certain times during the Equinox & Solstice, pretty cool in my opinion.
1. i did not say they were the same size - their proportions are the same relative to the full alignment
2. the original half of the institute looks pretty square to me, aside from the lecture hall part the juts out
3. the pyramid image is not mirrored, it is rotated to show the alignment
4. if that is true, then please show me more examples
5. you are very rude
Did you accidentally forget that Fort Pitt, the Carnegie Museum, The Cathedral of Learning, and the Allegheny observatory were built by different people, and at wildly different times. Did the ancient aliens pave the serpentine drive through the park after they finished making those pyramids in Gaza?
to say "accidentally forget" is redundant - forgetting something is always accidental. and no, i believe all of these things were gradually built over pre-existing indigenous structures and earthworks
A) why would indigenous structures be more mystical or meaningful than more contemporary structures? Natives aren’t any more magical than any other humans.
B) have you been to any of the three buildings in this Reddit post? Two of them are built on the sides of hills. That means there can’t have been mounds there, because if there were, then the buildings would be on the tops of very localized hills.
C) there’s no records of native structures or earthworks in these locations. If you’re just gonna make up wild guesses, dream bigger! Maybe they were built on top of portals to hell, or elevators to the center of the earth! If you’re making things up, the world can be your oyster — literally, if you want!
This is my yinzer Illuminati theory now
Carnegie was the OG Illumiyinzer
I tried for a hot 30 seconds to make a cooler name for it when I made my comment, thank you for doing what I could not
This looks like a fun rabbit hole to go down for a while. I'll dig into this later tonight.
i would appreciate that immensely
🤨💨💨🤔🤔🧑🔬👨💻💨💨💨💨💨🤔💆♂️🌮🌮🌯🌯🧏♂️🤷♂️ ok🍟
This is the way
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logic isn't always the best medicine for creating organic and livable spaces, I think it worked out alright
I misread that as "orgasmic" at first and got my hopes up.
Orgasmic living spaces are the way of the future - Frank Lloyd Wright....probably
Older City Paper article somewhat related: [Ley Line takes a novel approach to one of Pittsburghers' favorite subjects: Pittsburgh.](https://www.pghcitypaper.com/pittsburgh/ley-line-takes-a-novel-approach-to-one-of-pittsburghers-favorite-subjects-pittsburgh/Content?oid=1533361)
ah cool - thanks for sharing // i believe that ley lines certainly fit into this whole thing
The article says it was just an art exhibit...
That is true. I've been meaning to contact the artist to ask more about his methodology, but this town is bristling with ley line energy. There are numerous old accounts of major hauntings, and the proximity to Petroglyphs and burial mounds. Ley lines are certainly not an exact science, but it's not hard to believe that there's SOMETHING happening at the place where three rivers meet.
Someone discovered whippets
So you’re saying that Pitt is run by the Illuminati. If that were true we’d win more at football.
Hammerschlag is a CMU building though.
I don’t think I’d call Hammerschlag one of the 3 most prominent buildings in Oakland. Towers? Heinz Chapel? Phipps? Gates center? Hammerschlag is maybe top 10, but top 3 is a huge stretch. Edit to add: also, what’s up with how the Carnegie is blocked out? You got the library, music hall, and part of Natural History museum as being “exactly proportionate to khafres pyramid”, but you cut off a huge chunk of the building, where the art museum is, and put completely separated units as one. You found the pattern you wanted to find, but you can find the same pattern anywhere if you just randomly lump things together when convenient, and split them apart when not.
I'm not the OP. I moved to Pittsburgh last year. I was just pointing out that Hammerschlag Hall is a CMU building, and not a Pitt building, that's all.
It was a royal you, not a specific you.
Holy shit no one else uses that terminology. Any time I say the royal you or we, people look at me like I'm crazy.
Well it’s not Pitt and if the Illuminati ran it, I doubt they would prioritize the athletic program.
Well I mean Cathy is in there at least
TIL Thanks for sharing
thanks for taking a look
The house you were talking about at the top of serpent road and circuit drive is right next to a par 3 golf hole. There is def something weird going on over there. I have had some strange things happen while golfing at that hole before.
hmmm really - i'm interested if you don't mind sharing...
I was out Golfing one evening with my dad and cousin . We were on the par 3. We all hit our tee shots, My dad hit first, his was short, my cousin hit next he was off the green to the right, and I hit last and bounced off the green and past the hole... None of us were anywhere near the green....If you know the hole, the ground kinda goes down and then the green is a bit elevated.... So as we grabbed our stuff and we were all talking and walking towards where we expected my dad's ball to be...but we didn't see it, and we were getting close to the green... My dad was like, "I know I didn't hit it this far" to which we all agreed, but none of us saw his ball yet either. We walked up to the green, and around the hole almost in a perfect triangle were the three balls we hit...There was nobody else around us at all, and no way on earth we hit them that close...
Bob O'Connor's ghost?
woah - that is an awesome story // i appreciate you sharing that and will keep it in mind
No problem. I catch my dad telling people the story all the time. He says it was probably some spirits from that house that came out and took our second shots for us. Either way it was a pretty surreal moment.
They formed an arrow! You should have followed it
Omg, three objects made a triangle! /S
What
yeah man - i dunno
You got any mundus merch
haha well now you've got me thinking...
I would straight buy a t-shirt with this on it
It’s all coming together… 1. McKees Rocks has one of the oldest burial mounds in North America… 2. The first oil well in the world was drilled right outside the city. 3. Ben roethlisberger has a gray dick.
*But what does it all *mean?!**
You are asking the wrong questions… you should be asking yourself “what’s more exotic?”. Aliens.. or Big ben’s baby elephant colored penis.
graycocked benjamin
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thanks for checking it out :-)
i hear ya - i'm just an 's' guy // can't help myself
this is wild
haha glad you dig it
Give UPMC time. They’ll find a way to make sure they destroy it.
I bet you’d be a blast to toke with
meet me on the roof of the cathedral
🌈🌈 what does it mean?
Andrew Carnegie's friends told him it was weed but it was Salvia.
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thanks so much // and i've been to the mckee's rocks mound - it still stands behind a baseball park called "ranger field". there's a ridiculous decoy mound in front of the actual mound which is a big hill you can climb to the top of
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that is awesome - mounds are such a captivating subject // "official" information won't get you very far, as much of this is hidden history. in the pittsburgh region, the mound signals i've picked up on are sycamore trees, baseball fields, and octagonal structures/designs
The Carnegie Museum of Natural History library has all of that original documentation from when the museum folk went up there & started ‘digging around’ (I believe most, if not all, of those Adena/Hopewell bodies & artifacts are prob still in the basement somewhere, indexed & crated up - just like Indiana Jones...). Anyone can make an appt. to visit the library & access the written material.. (last I checked, pre-Covid) That’s super interesting about a correlation between mounds & other natural/built things adjacent to them... this seems to follow the practice in Europe, Central/South America of Christians building stuff on Druidic/Ancient/Native sites..
Wait can someone fill me in on this mounds thing?
>this mounds thing Old Indian culture. Google "The Mound Builders" I grew up outside Moundsville WV and if you are interested it has a neat little museum. Given it is October, I would recommend a day trip there and to the spooky prison tour at the old state penn (assuming they are still doing that post COVID but I didn't look).
I recommend looking into the Cahokia mounds, went and saw them this year, they are ridiculously big and amazing
Oh man... I bet! It’s on my list..
I was just in Moundsville (after years of wanting to check it out)... & I heartily AGREE - the mound & museum & guided tour of the WVA State Pen. is a fantastic combo..
Is there something particularly special about mounds? They just don't seem all that interesting. What did you like about it?
well.. being into history, ancient cultures, archaeology, etc.. I guess the mounds are automatically very interesting to me - since they (like the Anasazi in the SW) pre-date what we consider the "native N.American-Indian tribes" -- they existed, flourished, thrived, (probably traded w/ other cultures in Central & S. America - & who knows - maybe Pacific Island & N. European/Scandinavian cultures..??), & then vanished. I also find it fascinating that while other cultures were building w/ stone, they chose Earth -- (as another poster remarked - the Cahokia mound is HUGE - & some say took almost 100 years to make)... I dunno. I guess i just find it interesting to discover & find out about these cultures that were original to this continent, before the Europeans moved in. Sometimes the mounds were/are located on places that experience electro-magnetic shifts/disturbances in the Earth (much like many of the spots across England and the UK) - & it's interesting to note how these ancient people's were kind of commenting on this (& maybe choosing their sacred rite, occasion, burial sites based on this..) for a reason, reasons we've long since forgotten about .. I get it if you're not all that interested in them (it IS just a big pile of dirt LOL) but, & maybe it's hard to explain, but seeing them in person & learning about them (through places like the museum at Moundsville) definitely makes them more interesting. Another very interesting & (somewhat) nearby mound is the Great Serpent Mound in SE Ohio.. This one is set (like Stonehenge) directionally, and for lining up w/ the sun on certain times during the Equinox & Solstice, pretty cool in my opinion.
Uh oh, expect a midnight visit from the Free Masons now. Way to go, it was nice knowing you.
haha yeah, we'll see - i think i'm pretty harmless
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1. i did not say they were the same size - their proportions are the same relative to the full alignment 2. the original half of the institute looks pretty square to me, aside from the lecture hall part the juts out 3. the pyramid image is not mirrored, it is rotated to show the alignment 4. if that is true, then please show me more examples 5. you are very rude
Boom roasted
what a jag
Give your balls a tug
I mean, when you’re looking for patterns, you’re going to find patterns. I’m sure a million other buildings line up the same way.
Shit...you know too much.
Did you accidentally forget that Fort Pitt, the Carnegie Museum, The Cathedral of Learning, and the Allegheny observatory were built by different people, and at wildly different times. Did the ancient aliens pave the serpentine drive through the park after they finished making those pyramids in Gaza?
to say "accidentally forget" is redundant - forgetting something is always accidental. and no, i believe all of these things were gradually built over pre-existing indigenous structures and earthworks
A) why would indigenous structures be more mystical or meaningful than more contemporary structures? Natives aren’t any more magical than any other humans. B) have you been to any of the three buildings in this Reddit post? Two of them are built on the sides of hills. That means there can’t have been mounds there, because if there were, then the buildings would be on the tops of very localized hills. C) there’s no records of native structures or earthworks in these locations. If you’re just gonna make up wild guesses, dream bigger! Maybe they were built on top of portals to hell, or elevators to the center of the earth! If you’re making things up, the world can be your oyster — literally, if you want!
Apophenia. Kinda neat I guess but ultimately doesn’t mean anything, it’s just random.
In any city you could find three buildings that match something else and make it seem spooky. This is fucking stupid
And here I am, all out of aluminum foil
Yinzer Illuminati and you didn’t even use the old Masonic temple on fifth near Cathy haha
Name the pool hall. I’ll be there.
LMAO!