A Story from Treasurenet
Open Cut Treasure Site
« on: November 06, 2004, 03:28:51 am »
We dug our site in Southern Mindanao, Philippines with a Japanese-trained sign & symbol reader and another member that knows the Japanese language as guides in our subsurface journey. We reached the "ceiling of the dome" after digging about 77ft. Our reader believed that we have reached the chamber of the treasure cache. We dug a pilot hole on the "ceiling" and hollow sound could be heard upon striking the deepest part after digging about 3 ft deep(total deepness now about 80ft).
We have dug layers upon layers of concrete and clay before reaching this "dome". Embedded on these layers were stones (sizes: small to large, about 500kg) with signs and symbols on them pointing to our target which is beneath the center of our hole. Other embedded pointers were tree trunks, branches, leaves, wood slab flooring, etc., all fresh looking considering they were buried 60+ years ago. Water is flowing in at about 200gpm from 2 tunnels at 39ft level. The tunnels are about 4ft high and about 6ft wide at the base (concrete arc shaped tunnels).
We stuffed them with sand bags to stop sand from coming in. Water though could freely flow. Tunnels are positive indicators that the target had been zeroed in. Other treasure hunters called it "water trap".
Our target deepness is 90ft (based on the cylindrical concrete surface marker with 3 X's engraved on its top). This could be true considering that we have reached the "ceiling of the dome" at about 77ft. The height of the "dome" could be about 10ft high. One could just imagine what is inside the "dome". Our reader is expecting us to see a concrete vault.
The pit is fully timbered and we have a set of tools and equipment present at the site. We have to rehabilitate the timber and overhaul the equipments upon re-starting the operation though. We can select a new set of crew before re-starting the operation. What we need is an investor (from anywhere in the world) who can help us complete the project. Two foreign nationals accompanied by their local lawyers paid us a visit and offered to buy us out.
The offer was about US$180T, but that is less than 1% of what our reader is expecting us to recover from the site. Our reader knew that the deposit is 3 tons upwards of gold bars, gold coins, jewelries and diamonds. We declined the offer.
We temporarily stopped the operation because of financial constraints on the part of our current investors. The project needs an amount for the recovery efforts. It's no longer a "small" project as we envisioned when we first started the diggings. But all indications are there. The search is over. The "dome" of the cache has been found.
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