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        <title>9,000ft Trees Covered the Earth — They Cut Them All and Called Them Mountains</title>
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        <description>What if the mountains aren't mountains at all? What if the flat-topped formations rising from every continent on Earth — Devil's Tower, Table Mountain, the Tepuis of Venezuela, the mesas of Monument Valley — are the remnants of something so vast and so alive that when it ended, we looked at what remained and called it geology? Flat tops. Hexagonal columns. Petrified cellular structures at impossible scales. The same shape, repeating across continents that have never shared a geological history. The standard explanation — differential erosion, columnar jointing, ancient volcanic events — begins to strain when you place the anomalies together on the same map. The Pittsburgh coal seam spanning tens of thousands of square kilometers. Petrified material in Egypt and Slovakia at scales no known species can account for. Column structures at Devil's Tower so regular, so parallel, so unlike what cooling lava should produce, that some researchers have noted they more closely resemble the cellular structure of wood than fractured basalt. And then the Permian extinction — the Great Dying — arriving not gradually but as an ending. Complete. Abrupt. After which the giants of the fossil record simply vanish, without a transitional sequence, without a slow decline. As I followed the evidence across formations and continents and geological periods, a pattern emerged that I could not dismiss. Not regional anomalies. Not independent coincidences producing identical shapes by separate processes. The same column. The same flat top. The same outline, standing on every continent, in rock we've named and categorized and filed — and then stopped asking questions about. Because here's what the official framework also did. It didn't just explain the formations. It may have closed the questions before they were fully opened. The coal seams, the petrified remains, the flat-capped mountains — officially designated, officially explained, and quietly placed beyond the reach of sustained inquiry. Not denied. Not destroyed. Just named. And the generations that might have looked more carefully were handed a vocabulary that made looking unnecessary. This investigation asks whether the flat-topped mountains are geology — or whether they are what's left of a world that ended. The material on this channel presents exploratory interpretations of history and imaginative speculation, conveyed through narrative storytelling rather than precise historical documentation. Viewpoints and visual representations are dramatized or intentionally constructed to support alternative narrative exploration. Visual elements may at times be created using automated or generative tools. The content shared should not be considered factual. #tartaria #oldworld #giantancienttrees #flattopmountains #devilstower #tablemountain #tepuis #forbiddengeology #hiddenhistory #petrifiedworld #lostcivilization #erasedhistory</description>
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