Mpuluzi Batholith: A 200-Million-Year-Old ‘Giant’ Footprint Discovered In South Africa

Michael Tellinger, a South African author, scientist, researcher, and adventurer known as “The South African Indiana Jones,” presents what may be the strongest evidence to date that giants formerly walked the planet.

“There is a larger possibility of small green guys arriving from space and sucking it out with their tongues than it being generated by natural erosion,” states Prof. Pieter Wagener, an applied math PhD candidate from the Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University in Port Elizabeth, South Africa. It is located in the town of Mpaluzi in South Africa, not far from the border with Swaziland.

Based on current knowledge of how granite has formed over Earth’s history, its age is estimated to be between 200 million and 3 billion years.

This dating immediately causes us to disagree strongly, therefore it would be best if we kept an open mind and concentrated on the facts.

Known as the Eastern Transvaal at the time, this was a barren area of South Africa that was home to lions and antelope.

It remains in the same condition as when it was found, and because of its remote location, there is very little chance that it is a haunted hoax. It is still uncommon to come across.

The real enigma lies in how this amazing occurrence came to be—no, we don’t know—but it exists and won’t go away.

Yes, it is granite; all geological maps show this well-known South African geological feature, which is why the footprint remains so mysterious.

Robert Schoch standing close to the peculiar granite impression, which some have interpreted as a massive footprint.

It can be characterized as coarse porphyritic granite that underwent multiple chilling processes OR as a “phenocrystic” granite. The final result is a fascinating mixture of big and little grains.

Because the granite will appear extremely “beautiful” when polished, granite retailers are drawn to this site for mining.

In South African geology, this outcrop is referred to as the Mpuluzi Batholith (Granite), and formal dating of this rock revealed ages of around 3.1 billion years.

“This is a real mystery that needs to be thoroughly investigated by scientists.”

Magellan’s Odd Meeting With Patagonia’s 10-Foot Giants

When Ferdinand Magellan stopped in what is now Patagonia in 1520 amid his hectic itinerary of circumnavigating the globe, he discovered a nude giant singing and dancing on the coast. Sadly, history has forgotten the unintentional emissary’s amusing response when Magellan ordered one of his men to establish contact. He also instructed him to make sure that the dancing and singing were returned in a show of friendliness.

It was successful. The huge captain was waiting on a little island off the coast, which the man managed to guide the giant to. Antonio Pigafetta, a scholar who traveled with the expedition and whose journal was eventually published as Magellan’s Voyage: A Narrative Account of the First Circumnavigation, described the scene as follows: “When he was before us, he began to marvel and to be afraid, and he raised one finger upward, believing that we came from heaven.” He had a loud, booming voice and was so tall that the tallest of us could only reach his waist. It’s demonstrated by the accompanying graphic, which shows that giants that positively dwarfed the heavenly Europeans who would eventually vanquish them once lived in Patagonia.

 

Okay, so perhaps that isn’t indisputable proof. It is possible, however, that the Tehuelche people whom Magellan saw were indeed very large, giving some credence to this narrative. Furthermore, our intrepid explorer would be damned if he didn’t attempt to get evidence in the most annoying manner imaginable.

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