Author and researcher of megalithic and pyramid sites around the world Dr. Semir Osmanagić is currently in Southeast Asia, in the Democratic People's Republic of Laos. He is in the north of the country researching the mysterious megalithic vessels ('Plain of Jars'). About 2,000 have been registered, and probably thousands have been destroyed over time, wars (especially the Vietnam War when the Americans dropped 270 million bombs on this small country) or buried by landslides. The most massive reach 12 tons.
Four archaeological expeditions in the last 100 years and teams from France, Japan, Belgium and Australia claim that these vessels are associated with the dead. It used to be said that people were buried under them, but this has been dismissed as no human remains have been found under any of the vessels. The currently valid hypothesis is that they placed the dead in containers, waited for the bodies to decompose (?) and then buried them nearby.
The lack of inventiveness and ignorance of archaeologists is obvious in this case.
After researching four locations (1, 2, 3 and 21), Dr. Osmanagich came to the following conclusions:
- All the megalithic vessels are located on the tops of the hills, which were once clear of vegetation
- The vessels have their openings facing the sky
- Certain trees near the containers have spirally twisted bark. This means that below them are energy vortices, potent places
- There were no lids on the dishes
- The capacity of megalithic vessels is between 300-2,000 liters of liquid
Conclusion: megalithic vessels were used to collect water, rainwater. Stone is an eternal material for storing water (unlike our materials of plastic, rubber, glass). Water is exposed to underground energies and the energy of the sun's rays. So the water begins to vibrate high.
We are what we drink.
The results of the work of the ancients can be explained simply, logically and practically. Archaeologists always lead us to the solutions that the objects were built for the dead, when in fact, the truth is diametrically opposite. They served communities of living people.
Dr Osmanagich made a film about his visit, which, after editing, will go to film festivals in the spring of 2025.