Hi,
I had heard many stories about treasures but there is one that always stuck with me. And this is how it goes briefly:
A sheepherder was walking in a mountain and suddenly the stone below him flipped and he fell down a shaft. He couldn't climb back. But he found a tunnel. He walked and walked for many kilometers. The tunnel was freezing cold. The snot turned into ice on his nose. He thought he won't survive this. But he did made it to some sort of an exit. He found himself in a cave that was approximately 6 to 8 km from where he fell. But there was one small detail that he mentioned about the tunnel. There were pot of golds inside of it. One meter high pot of golds.
The story is dear to me. Because of many things. First, the location where he fell is a famous location among all treasure hunters in this region. Second, there is a visible aqueduct bridge on the mountain side and seven doors built into the mountain side within a 1 km distance. And finally, my father was told the story by the sheepherder himself.
Tonight, as I was messing with google earth. I tried to find a connection between two sites. One I worked on and found many interesting things in it but I can't talk about it to keep this brief. The other is a one I just visited but never worked on it. I just checked some sort of a settling basin there that was uncovered by others a long time ago. Let's call them A and B.
I was experimenting with the ruler and tried to measure the distance. It was 12km roughly. I thought wouldn't be cool if I found a new location 12km to the northeast that is aligned with A and B and also at the same distance from them? And I did find the traces of some dug holes. The pattern was clear to me as daylight. These were treasure hunters digging aimlessly in that area. Let's call this location C.
A, B, C are aligned. And between B and C is the location where the sheepherder had supposedly fell. And C is where he found the exit of the tunnel.
I know, treasure fever can make you see things that aren't there but -damn- if that isn't a peculiar coincidence. My theory is that he fell into what is called a dropshaft and ended up in an underground aqueduct. But if I'm to pick holes at my theory I'd raise a couple of questions:
1- If I end up telling people about pot of golds, why would no one make an effort to trace back my path and try and find the exit?
2- No reliable source ever mention Roman using aqueduct to store any treasures.
3- Irrigation system rarely take a straight path. Even if they did for some reason, there is no point on building locations that are the same distance apart along its line.
I just got a little bit excited with my findings and wanted to share it with you.
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Ammar