More than a mile down in many places, these special sites have still already started revealing their secrets to me.

 

Table of Contents:

  1. Introduction
  2. Mermaids Help
  3. Overall (Images)
  4. Procedure and Progression
  5. Spec’s
  6. Atlantic, North
  7. Atlantic, South
  8. Arctic Ocean
  9. Indian Ocean
  10. Pacific, North
  11. Pacific, South
  12. Southern Ocean
  13. Oceans in Earth’s Crust
  14. Oceans of the Hollow Core
  15. Oceans on Other Worlds
  16. Conceptual/General Images

 

Introduction:

Did you know that roughly 96% of our oceans remain unknown, unexplored, not ever once probed through?  We know more about Outer Space than we do about what’s under the waves off our own shores.  It’s high time I helped change all that.

You’ve probably heard of “the seven seas”;

  1. Arctic Ocean
  2. Atlantic, North
  3. Atlantic, South
  4. Indian Ocean
  5. Pacific, North
  6. Pacific, South
  7. Southern Ocean

I’ve pinpointed vast ruins throughout them all, and am now ready to start making my way out there, all with the invitations and help of their people, of course (who, you might not know, are manifestations/incarnations of those oceans themselves; that’s right; they descended not from apes or aliens, but the water itself).  With their guidance, I know I’ll find all the best of what’s down there.  I’ll post the declassified findings here.

Names of some of the ocean-floor ruins:

  • Baltic Sea Anomaly
  • Bermuda Triangle Pyramid/s
  • Bimini Road
  • Cruiser Tablemount
  • Yonaguni Ruins

Did you know there are also oceans underground?  I’m not talking about ponds in caves and caverns; there are vast state-sized bodies of water deep below the surface human civilization is built upon.  I’ve already made contact with the people whose ancestors came from those shadowy (and sometimes bioluminescence-lighted) realms.  A few of their particularly-attractive females will be playing guide and hostess when we’re “down there” (or, as we Inisfreeans like to think of it, up there; closer to The Source).

I’ll also explore the depths of the oceans on the other side of the crust; those are the ones not technically under (in the) ground (planetary “crust”), but on the habitable (and inhabited) surface of the hollow core (a.k.a. The Inner Earth, Agharta, etc.).  Do they have ruins in/on them also?  I’ll find out.

Then there are the ocean-floors on other worlds; Earth isn’t the only planet with lots of water.

The intersections of the world’s energy-grid / ley-lines probably all have a pyramids-complex on them, even if they are presently underwater.  It wasn’t that long ago that those sites were not underwater at all.  Plus, as you might know, some people have submarines… or are even amphibious; Atlanteans, etc..

Since I have not listed near/offshore/barely-submerged sites on my other expedition webpages, even though those sites are on continental shelves, not true floors of oceans, I’ll still include them on this webpage.”

 

Mermaids Help:

Great women such as these, given their genetic/elemental makeup (not to mention their powers, locations, kingdoms, etc.), will help show me the way –and how to interpret/hear what I find:

 

Overall:

Procedure and Progression:

At first, I’ll use the submarines of sightseeing companies and wealthy friends (to reach stuff in shallow places, not the risky high-pressure depths).
Then I’ll use my own submersible vessels (such as MPHAs, WSs, etc.), launched from the under-hemisphere of Inisfree, out through the sub-glacial river-ways of Antarctica.
Finally, I’ll go on my own (ship/tech’-free) –albeit often with beautiful amphibious guides (mermaids, Atlantean royals, etc.).  This is when all of my god-level superpowers will have stabilized, long-since kicking in, being noticed, and being honed/mastered.

This will give “cultural submersion” a whole new and literal meaning.

2023 December update:  I’ll also be waiting, in some cases, for ocean-floors to be brought closer to the water-surface, and/or the ocean-levels to be lowered, such as by the vertical part of continental-drift / tectonic-shifting.  In short, some underwater sites will not be (so) underwater… fairly soon.

 

Spec’s:

Earth’s oceans range in depth from the Arctic Ocean’s generally half-mile depth, to the Pacific Ocean’s 2.3-mile depth (and its deepest point being 6.8 miles down), all of them together averaging 2.3 miles.  That’s thousands of human-sized building-stories down from the surface, just about anywhere.  Surface-dwellers are generally only able to go down two of those stories.

Temperatures in those waters range dramatically; some are a pleasant 30°C (86°F) in the tropics… to a very cold -2°C (28°F) near the poles.  Most people prefer the shallow coastal waters near popular beaches and island resorts, where the blues are bright, everything relatively clear like you’d see in a swimming pool, and the wading in warmth that is “juuust riiight”.  I’ve trained to become more accustomed to what one finds off the shores of Alaska, making it familiar and even comfortable to me to jump right in to every area except those with sharks and icebergs.

Sea-life also differs greatly from region to region; there are 228,450 known species inhabiting all the oceans, with each ocean harboring tens of thousands of them, but only some of the oceans are habitable for penguins, while others work much better for certain races of whales.  One ocean is also said to house the Illithids or R’lyehans, while the rest have nothing of the sort.  It is critical to learn what is in any ocean you plan to sail upon, much less dive into, lest you encounter something you don’t want… that does want you.

Ocean currents range within ~1 to 5 MPH.  The Gulf Stream (off the Atlantic seaboard of the land once known as the U.S.) flows 300 times faster than the Amazon River, and fastest near the surface; its top speed there is 5.6 MPH.  Find the right current/s, and you won’t need any propulsion or sails.

Whirlpools and big clusters of bubbles are areas of concern, as both can cause sudden drops toward higher-pressure depths and other undersea challenges/hazards.  Anytime either are spotted, or even the telltale signs that they are coming, or about to begin, one should maneuver away with haste –unless that person can swim like an Atlantean/mer-person.  In that case, you’ll be fine, either way.

The area, volume, and other spec’s of these oceans can be found here.

 

Arctic Ocean:

 

Atlantic, North:

  1. Baltic Sea Anomaly
  2. Bermuda Triangle
  3. Bimini Road
  4. Cruiser Tablemount
  5. Gibraltar-proximity reported SONAR-detected underwater pyramid –near one of the Azores islands (about 1/3 of the way from Portugal to New York)
  6. Venezuela’s offshore whirlpool/s

 

Atlantic, South:

Findings TBA…

 

Indian Ocean:

 

Pacific, North:

  • Mariana Trench
  • Yonaguni Ruins –would be part of Japan if not completely underwater these days

 

Pacific, South:

  • R’lyeh

 

Southern Ocean:

 

Unspecified Location:

 

Oceans in Earth’s Crust:

Findings TBA…

 

Oceans of the Hollow Core:

Findings TBA…

 

Oceans on Other Worlds:

Findings TBA… (such as those of Vanaheim’s oceans, the oceans of the worlds of the Pleiades, etc.)

 

Also see: