Yeah, as soon as they said ground penetrating radar detected burials, I knew it was bullshit.
I've watched a lot of "Time Team", a British show that carries out archaeological digs. That makes me an armchair archaeologist. This is a learing opportunity. kek
Ground scans aka "GeoPhys" are the first thing they do to find potential dig targets. The old school archaeologists regularly make fun of the Geophys guy and his high-tech scanners as they rarely find anything of note. Poor Stewart. I sometimes feel bad for him.
The only way to find out what is down there is to carefully excavate it layer by layer. A blotch on a radar scan could be a grave, but it could also be a rotting tree stump, a patch of clay, an old ditch.. anything really. It's just a different density that makes it stand out against the rest.
So they found potential targets and then refused to excavate so they could sell a BS story to rile everyone up. Typical of Canadian MSM.
I said it was a hoax when the story came out. Nearly all alleged bodies would have had someone looking for them. Especially if it was missionaries or some-such running the place - those people were never self-funded, and often had 'bosses'.
The movies have given the locum/outback teachers'priests a bad name.
Anyway, I waited for proof - The bones would have to be archeologically exhumed with DNA tests - and then families notified, even if it was a great-great-great grand-nephew. But ..... nothing.
Let alone in a British-subject native school, where the kids had family back home, who were by no means inclined to have their precious child go missing. But one cannot argue pragmatically on the internet.
Liars
Let them explain that to God
Yeah, as soon as they said ground penetrating radar detected burials, I knew it was bullshit.
I've watched a lot of "Time Team", a British show that carries out archaeological digs. That makes me an armchair archaeologist. This is a learing opportunity. kek
Ground scans aka "GeoPhys" are the first thing they do to find potential dig targets. The old school archaeologists regularly make fun of the Geophys guy and his high-tech scanners as they rarely find anything of note. Poor Stewart. I sometimes feel bad for him.
The only way to find out what is down there is to carefully excavate it layer by layer. A blotch on a radar scan could be a grave, but it could also be a rotting tree stump, a patch of clay, an old ditch.. anything really. It's just a different density that makes it stand out against the rest.
So they found potential targets and then refused to excavate so they could sell a BS story to rile everyone up. Typical of Canadian MSM.
I said it was a hoax when the story came out. Nearly all alleged bodies would have had someone looking for them. Especially if it was missionaries or some-such running the place - those people were never self-funded, and often had 'bosses'.
The movies have given the locum/outback teachers'priests a bad name.
Anyway, I waited for proof - The bones would have to be archeologically exhumed with DNA tests - and then families notified, even if it was a great-great-great grand-nephew. But ..... nothing.
Let alone in a British-subject native school, where the kids had family back home, who were by no means inclined to have their precious child go missing. But one cannot argue pragmatically on the internet.