 Thanks to improvements in modern archaeological technologies, and indeed the evolution of satellite resolution imagery of our spinning, living blue marble, we are fortunately entering an era where, thanks to penetrative stratophotography, the last remaining legacies of what we have long claimed would be found – that of one's highly capable global lost civilization or possibly many – and yet another proof of this hypothesis has recently been rediscovered in Iran. A gigantic artificial wall measuring approximately 71 miles in length, extending from the mountains of Bamu to an area near the town of Jean-Marg, Iran, has been exposed. To put this ancient feat into perspective, computer systems have estimated that more than one million cubic meters of stone would have had to have been quarried, transported and placed where they now lay, and this is a mere remnant of its past grandeur." With an estimated volume of one million cubic meters of stone, its construction would have required abundant resources. This in terms of labor, materials, and tremendous toil and time, wrote Sijad Ali-Bagi, PhD of the Archaeological Department of the University of Tehran, in an article published in the journal Antiquity. Although the existence of the wall long claimed as unknown to mainstream archaeology, those who have lived nearby for millennia have known about its existence all along, knowing it as Gari Wall or Gari Chen Wall. The venture party state that due to the wall's poor state of conservation, the researchers are not sure who built the structure and for what purpose. In fact, they are not even sure of its exact width and height. The best estimate is about 4 meters wide and 3 meters high. Its exact purpose remains a complete mystery, one which we find highly compelling.