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Underground Rivers - University of New Mexico

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Chapter 14 -- Hollow Earth Geophysics<br />

The Greatest Geographical Discovery in History Made by Admiral Richard E. Byrd in the<br />

Mysterious Land Beyond the Poles.<br />

DEDICATED To the Future Explorers <strong>of</strong> the <strong>New</strong> World that exists beyond North and South<br />

Poles in the hollow interior <strong>of</strong> the Earth. Who will repeat Admiral Byrd's historic Flight for 1,700<br />

Miles beyond the North Pole and that <strong>of</strong> his Expedition for 2,300 Miles beyond the South Pole,<br />

entering a <strong>New</strong> Unknown Territory not shown on any map, covering an immense land area<br />

whose total size is larger than North America, consisting <strong>of</strong> forests, mountains, lakes,<br />

vegetation and animal life.<br />

The King and Queen <strong>of</strong> the<br />

subterranean civilization<br />

Aghartha worry about atomic<br />

weapons, but allowed Byrd to<br />

enter because <strong>of</strong> his high<br />

moral character. We'll visit<br />

Aghartha again in Chapter<br />

71, Sub-Saharan Streamflow<br />

and Shambhala.<br />

While Bernard marketed his work as non-fiction, there no longer existed Boys Clubs as gullible as<br />

those <strong>of</strong> a half-century prior.<br />

Let's take a closer look at Bernard's cross-section. We see two<br />

tunnels to the earth's interior, one from Manaus, Brazil, the other from<br />

Mammoth Cave in the United States. We'll look at the karst geology<br />

<strong>of</strong> Mammoth Cave in Chapter 50. Note what the Brazilian route<br />

passes within the crust. A subterranean lake! Esoteric hydrology!<br />

If caverns connect upper land surfaces to the fresh water reservoirs <strong>of</strong><br />

the lower side, an artesian water well (a well in which the water level<br />

rises up the borehole) is explained by a deep lake on the bottom side.<br />

We create the figure below to illustrate a variety <strong>of</strong> hydrologic<br />

correspondences. On the left is an underground lake fed by an<br />

underground river. The spring feeding that river is fed by a lake on the<br />

underside. We've got a dry tunnel (safer than a polar maelstrom for<br />

human expeditions) and a few other water bodies for good measure.<br />

Underworld hydrology is much like that <strong>of</strong> our own, just upside down to us. Inhabitants on either<br />

side would see the other as "underground."<br />

To envision a unified hydrologic cycle, mirror an upside-down schematic beneath the one we<br />

know with River-Spring vertical links.<br />

DRAFT 1122//66//22001122<br />

Uppddaatteess aatt hhttttpp::////www. .uunnm. .eedduu//~rrhheeggggeenn//UnnddeerrggrroouunnddRi ivveerrss. .hhttml l<br />

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