The Isle of Pines is an island located in the Pacific Ocean, in the archipelago of New Caledonia. It has a couple of very strange things that put some questions to us that need some honest inquiries and not just off-hand denial. If we can’t ask questions with an open mind today, is there any hope for the many of the answers we’ll need going into the 2012 window of many questions?
Of the thousands of strange anomalies that need our open-minded approach comes from the Isle of Pines, so named after the English explorer James Cook. This is the only island where ancient pine trees (Araucaria cookii) thrive and grow. When discovered in 1774 the scientific world was baffled. These trees grew to 135 feet tall. But, it got worse- much worse.
In 1961!
Luc Chevalier decided to ask some obvious questions that for some strange reason had gone un examined. It wasn’t just the pines, but the vast number of tumuli: mounds of earth. Why were they there? What purpose did they serve? We’re they natural or man-made. Biggest of all questions, was there anything under them? A ha! Why hadn’t that question ever been broached?
And here’s what he found- to to three foot wide and seven to eight foot cylinders. And?
It’s the and that’s the deep one. These cylinders were man made- of concrete. So, they have to be fairly recent in origins. Right? Wrong. Carbon dating put the age of the cylinders at 12,000 years old. It gets more funky. There was nothing in them. There were no bones, no artifacts, symbols, and in fact, no drawing on inscriptions at all.
For those that are not afraid to ask. What other purpose could the pines and the concrete cylinders, buried in the ground sreve other that to block hurricanes and oceanic storms. Okay, that’s a no-brainer. But how about this one. Who had the technology to do what scientists tell us was not possible 12,000 years ago.
Work on that one. It’s just one more reminder that much of our future isn’t to be discovered out there somewhere, but in here, buried beneath the earth and sea. Let’s look more seriously and question more openly.



