The Nephilim Giants; A Tour of the Nephilim Giant's Tombs in the Ohio Valley
Uploader Comments (TheMoundbuilder)
All Comments (20)
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Fascinating But..Where's The Skeleton's,?
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@ruralkiller You shouldn't walk on the mounds, you shouldn't dig in the mounds! They contain burials, show some respect.
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I think folks such as Darius should open their mind to actually reading what the accounts themselves say, and do their own research before making declarations that something is entirely "B.S."
It doesn't help that during this unique period of disclosure to the world that true giants actually did exist, a fantastic amount of photo shop fakery and absurdities are being released on the internet at the same time. Almost as if it were intentional disinformation.
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Well said. I couldn't have said it better myself.
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@DariusVoid There are over 300 historical accounts of large skeletons being found within burial mounds and glacial kames across North America. These accounts can be found in "The Nephilim Chronicles: Fallen Angles in the Ohio Valley" Many of these accounts were reported by scientists, doctors and Government officials in Government papers, County Histories, Newspaper accounts who, according to Darius were all involved in some kind of conspiracy?
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@DariusVoid The mounds in downtown Grand Rapids were reconstructed. They were originally built by the early Iroquois. There are some large mounds just south of town that are worth investigating. There are directions to these mounds and other near you in The Nephilim Chronicles; A Travek Guide to the Ancient Ruins in the Ohio Valley.
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I remember there being 'mounds' in downtown Grand Rapids , Michigan as a kid. I recall them being called 'mound-builders' but never heard of large skeletons. In fact, I recall that 'Native Americans' had prevented any digging - or something...I wonder what's in those mounds, now that I think about it... huh. weird.
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Too fast, not enough time to read the writing on the video...
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There's actual photos of the giant nephilum skulls and different bones, just type in under search and you'll find Tons of links.
Yes, the Allegewi (Adena) from which the Allegheny River and Mountains were named
TheMoundbuilder 9 months ago
are these the Alleghen Peoples?
merryprankster60 9 months ago
@merryprankster60 Yes!
TheMoundbuilder 2 months ago