
The pictures below were taken at Limestone Corner, twenty five feet from Hadrian’s Wall on the anceint road between Newcastle and Carlisle, on the seventy second day of the 1,550th year since the debris from a comet devastated Britain and Bolivia, in the year commonly known as 562AD. The picture above was taken at the same place at a time as yet unknown.


I’m certainly no expert on vitrification or archeology, but these rocks look like they were melted together and have gradually been worn away by the elements, as is the way with limestone.


The cracks that have appeared in the rocks follow no logical pattern. They are also far too big to have been melded together by the ingenuity and/or industry of Mankind, whilst it is likely that the temperatures caused by the comet would probably have been in excess of 1,000 times the heat generated by the nuclear bombing of Hiroshima, which could not have been caused by any technology available in 562AD.



