Its under an electric station nearby. The city is distancing itself and says it does not own the property. The city claims it was used as an Army research facility and missile base.
I swear to you all that during the cover of thunderstorms, I have been hearing explosions going on nearby from my home.
I am a combat veteran and can tell the difference between thunder and explosions.
This is intense.
EDIT: OKAY I DIDNT CONFIRM THE DUMB BUT LOOK AT THIS LETTER AND DECIDE.. https://ibb.co/0yXrK9P
Located on the east side of the City, Western Electric is a 22-acre former US Army missile & communications systems manufacturing site with 760,000 square feet of space in 16 buildings. At its peak in the 1960’s, this plant employed almost 4,000 engineers, technicians and line workers. Entire neighborhoods, schools and shopping areas were built nearby to serve the plant.
Employment slowly declined at the plant as the Cold War ended. In 1991, the facility officially closed. The property was sold by the US Government in 2004; it has been predominantly vacant since. In 2016, the plant was added to the National Register of Historic Places to encourage tax credit investors and historic redevelopment.
I’ve been in the deepest single mine shaft in North America (and least it was claimed as such a few years ago). It was almost 7000 ft or just over 1 mile deep.
They must have technology we don’t to go 10 km. Some locations, like the mine I visited, have dense geology below them, which efficiently transfers heat from the earth. Rock surface temperatures of 180 degrees F, and water raining down that’s just as hot.
They’d need tech that’s at least 100 years ahead of us. I’m not saying they couldn’t - the sacred geometry stuff blows my mind. Our ancestors were the Jetsons and we’re the Flintstones.