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When America and the Soviet Union successively tested nuclear bombs in the 1940s, both superpowers decided that the atom was the future. Various large-scale projects using the power of the half-lives of uranium isotopes and other elements with similar properties have been developed by almost dozens.

One of these ideas was to create “atomic bullets” whose power would be as destructive as that of a nuclear bomb. But there is negligibly little information about these developments, and this whole story is overgrown with so many fables that today it is a semi-myth, the veracity of which few believe.

Atomic bullets appear in a number of science fiction stories. But at some point, Soviet military engineers seriously thought about the possibility of creating ammunition that would contain a radioactive element. To be fair, it should be pointed out that in some way these dreams were realized and are actively used today. We are talking about armor-piercing sub-caliber shells, which actually contain uranium. It’s just that in these munitions it is depleted and is not used at all as a “small nuclear bomb”.

As for the “atomic bullets” project itself, according to a number of sources that began to appear in the media already in the 1990s, Soviet scientists managed to create 14.3 mm and 12.7 mm ammunition for heavy machine guns. In addition, there is information about a 7.62 mm bullet. The weapons used in this case vary: some sources indicate that bullets of this caliber were made for a Kalashnikov assault rifle, while others indicate that they were made for his heavy machine gun.

According to the developers’ plans, such unusual ammunition was supposed to have enormous power: one bullet would “bake” an armored tank, and several would wipe out an entire building. According to published documents, not only prototypes were manufactured, but also successful tests were carried out. However, what stood in the way of these statements was, first of all, physics.

At first it was the concept of critical mass, which did not allow the use of uranium 235 or plutonium 239, traditional in the manufacture of nuclear bombs, for atomic bullets.

Then Soviet scientists decided to use the newly discovered transuranium element californium in these munitions. Its critical mass is only 1.8 grams. It would seem that it is enough to “compress” the required amount of californium into a bullet, and you will get a miniature nuclear explosion.

But here a new problem arises - excessive heat generation during the decay of the element. And a bullet with californium could emit about 5 watts of heat. This would make it dangerous both for the weapon and for the shooter - the ammunition could get stuck in the chamber or barrel, or could spontaneously explode during a shot. They tried to find a solution to this problem by creating special refrigerators for bullets, but their design and operating features were quickly considered impractical.

The main problem with using californium in atomic bullets was its depletion as a resource: the element was quickly running out, especially after the introduction of a moratorium on nuclear weapons testing. In addition, by the end of the 1970s, it became obvious that both enemy armored vehicles and structures could be successfully destroyed using more traditional methods. Therefore, according to sources, the project was finally abandoned in the early 1980s.

Despite a number of publications about the “atomic bullet” project, there are many skeptics who resolutely reject the information that such ammunition ever existed. Literally everything is subject to criticism: from the choice of californium for making bullets to their caliber and the use of Kalashnikov weapons.

Today, the history of these developments has turned into something between a scientific myth and a sensation, about which there is too little information to draw clear conclusions. But one thing can be said with confidence: no matter how much truth there is in published sources, such an ambitious idea in itself undoubtedly existed among not only Soviet but also American scientists.

For many years, the world “elite” and its masters, using orthodox science as a tool to manipulate people’s consciousness, hid its true history from humanity. For this purpose, ancient written sources were destroyed, replaced with falsified forgeries, and numerous artifacts were ignored, including ancient megalithic structures, especially those related to the culture of Arctida (Hyperborea).

One of these amazing artifacts are the finds made in 1922 on the Kola Peninsula in the Seydozero region by A. Barchenko’s group, which included serious scientists. Megalithic structures and other traces of ancient Arctic civilization were discovered here. Here, for example, is what one of the participants in this expedition, astrophysicist A. Condiain, wrote in his diary:

“Against a white, seemingly cleared background, a gigantic figure stands out, reminiscent of a human being with its dark contours. Motovskaya Bay is amazingly, grandiosely beautiful. One must imagine a narrow corridor two or three miles wide, limited on the right and left by gigantic steep cliffs up to one mile in height. All around are mountains Autumn has decorated the slopes interspersed with bushes of birch, aspen and alder.In the distance lie gorges, among which is Seydozero.

In one of the gorges we saw a mysterious thing. Next to the snow, here and there in patches lying on the slopes of the gorge, a yellowish-white column like a giant candle could be seen, and next to it a cubic stone. On the other side of the mountain a gigantic cave stood out at an altitude of 200 fathoms, and nearby there was something like a crypt. The outlines of the “Old Man” stood out clearly on the white ceiling of the mountain.

A luxurious path leads to the lake through Taibola. Or rather, a wide carriageway; it even seems like it is paved. At the end of the road there is a small hill. Everything suggests that in ancient times the grove was a protected area, and the elevation at the end of the road served as an altar-altar in front of the “Old Man”.

However, instead of making these discoveries public, all members of the expedition were destroyed by the NKVD. The expedition of V. Demin, which visited these places in 1997, confirmed the presence of an entire ancient city here, once surrounded by Cyclopean stone walls and having its own observatory.

And here is how Russian traveler, biologist, anthropologist G. Sidorov comments on all these finds: “The discovery on the Kola Peninsula overturns the traditional idea of ​​the history of earthly civilization. So what? Both Barchenko and his comrades are destroyed, their diaries and the book by A. Barchenko, written by him for Russia before the execution, are destroyed.

All threads leading to the find are cut off. In addition, under various pretexts, units of the NKVD are engaged in “combing” the Kostroma, Bryansk, Vyatka forests and forests of the north of Russia. Once again the authorities are trying to find the keepers of the secret. Of course, the crime can be blamed on the communists - now it has become fashionable.

But then why is free democratic science silent about this discovery, since in 1997 the expedition of V.N. Demin visited the ruins near Seydozero? And everything was confirmed - traces of ancient civilization are evident, but official scientific circles are in no hurry. Obviously, a refutation of the find is being considered; after all, it does not fit into the Semitic idea of ​​​​the development of earthly civilization. Time will tell what they will do with this find.

One thing is clear: the city found by A.V. Barchenko and V.N. Demin is older than all the civilizations of Asia and Africa, because it was once buried by a glacier, and the glacier on the Kola Peninsula only melted 10-12 thousand years BC .

But let the specialists in the destruction of ancient knowledge about Hyperborea not dream of burying the discovery of Barchenko and Demin, they will have to forget and bury too much. The fact is that the ruins of the Hierborean city discovered by Barchenko are just the beginning; other discoveries will follow."

The discovery made by the expeditions of A. Barchenko and V. Demin confirms like nothing better the ancient Greek myths about the legendary Arctic country located “beyond Boreas,” as well as the myths of many other peoples of the white race about their Arctic ancestral home. And this is further proof that ancient legends and myths do not lie, but are openly lied to our eyes by orthodox scholar-historians, lured by the “elite,” who are carrying out the order of their masters to conceal and discredit ancient knowledge and our real history.

The legendary Seydozero (Seydyavr) is a unique place in the Lovozero tundra in terms of beauty and quantity of either artifacts or simply natural remains. Seydozero (Murmansk region) is located in the vicinity of the village. Revda and village Lovozero.

The Sami name for this region is Luyavrchorr, which means mountains near the lake of power. This is a popular place among tourists, almost equal in height to its neighbors and surpassing them in the depth of crevices and gorges.

Scientists first came to the shores of Seydozero in 1887. It was included in the route of the Great Kola Expedition, the participants of which were, incl. V. Ramsay and A.G. Petrelius, well known to Khibiny tourists, because the passes of this mountain range bear their names.

Lake Seydozero has been actively studied since the 20s of the 20th century. It was then that the first research expedition set off here. Since then, disputes between scientists about the origin of the objects located here have not subsided. Esotericists consider them the remains of an ancient Civilization - Hyperborea, champions of materialistic science - creations of nature.

There is another version, which I adhere to, having visited Seydozero 5 times. Its name comes from the word “seid” - a sacred stone in which, according to Sami (Lapp) beliefs, the soul of a deceased Noida shaman found shelter. For a long time, such secluded reservoirs played a special role in their lives, performed a sacred function, and were a kind of temple.

I know of 4 lakes, indicated on the map as Seydozero, the Kola Peninsula is the center of Lapp culture, so the abundance of such sanctuaries here is not surprising. And it is not at all necessary to connect sacred buildings with disappeared mythical civilizations, forgetting about the original people who have inhabited this territory since ancient times.

Over the course of almost 100 years, several large expeditions were organized in these areas, the purpose of which was to confirm or refute the existence of the ancient Hyperborean civilization here; in addition, the area was actively studied by individual enthusiasts.

In addition to esoteric expeditions, the region was actively explored by geologists, its mineral resources were developed: ores containing uranium, rare earth metals. And today the road to Lake Seydozero lies through the Karnasurta mine, which is working again. Many exalted “Hyperboreans” very often mistake geological cores (grooves) and abandoned and exploded adits where uranium ore was mined for traces of other civilizations and ancient artifacts.

How did the study of these places begin, why did they begin to look for the mythical Hyperborea here?

Seydozero: expeditions, their findings and hypotheses

Barchenko expedition 1922
Alexander Barchenko, a doctor, adept of occult knowledge, and science fiction writer, was the first to draw attention to these regions. A very multifaceted personality, obsessed with the ideas of the secret tradition of Dunkhor, the ancient proto-civilization, various, as they would now say, extrasensory phenomena, such as telepathy, etc. Barchenko collaborated with the OGPU - he helped select employees endowed with superpowers in the cryptographic (encryption) department, headed by Gleb Bokiy. He actively recruited new followers of his ideas, including among the top leadership of the young Soviet state, gave lectures and even created a special circle, for which he was shot in 1938 along with Bokiy and his other associates.

One of the areas of his work was the study of measles or arctic psychosis - a condition when a person or group of people fell into prostration, became obedient to someone else's will, and sometimes began to prophesy or speak in incomprehensible languages. Cases of this disease have been recorded in the Arctic Circle, incl. and in Russian Lapland.

In order to understand this phenomenon, an expedition was organized to Seydozero, the Kola Peninsula. According to some sources, academician Bekhterev was among the initiators of this campaign, according to others, the OGPU was also interested in it, according to others, they were still looking for minerals, and the study of everything else was a secondary matter.

One way or another, the group of Alexander Barchenko, whose route and findings were described in detail in the diary of his associate, astronomer Alexander Kondiain, went to the Kola Peninsula. In August 1922, she ended up near Seydozero, in the Lavozero tundra.

Then the remains were discovered, the nature of which is still hotly debated: the Kuyva rock, an ancient paved road, pyramids, and a hole into an underground cave.

These finds, coupled with the ethnographic material collected by the expedition participants - legends and traditions of the Sami, allowed Barchenko to declare that his trip to Seydozero made it possible to make an unprecedented world discovery - the ancient civilization of Hyperborea.

He found opponents almost instantly. Among them are the famous geologist Academician Fersman, as well as Arnold Kolbanovsky, who organized a new trip to Seydozero in 1923, who argued that all the objects around the lake are of natural origin, there is no mysticism in them.

However, Barchenko's discoveries were greeted with great enthusiasm not only in Russia. So, in 1955, geologists accidentally stumbled upon a cache of things and tools with marks indicating their German origin near Seydozero. This made it possible to talk about the Fuhrer’s expedition, abandoned here either before the war or during it. As you know, the Nazis were also very interested in ancient artifacts and occult theories.

Expeditions of Valery Demin 1997, 1998, 2001

The Hyperborean theme came to life again 75 years later, when Doctor of Philosophy Valery Demin visited Seydozero, the report on his journey literally blew up the information space.

Members of the Hyperborea 97 expedition examined and photographed the objects found by Barchenko, and also found new ones: the remains of structures on the top of Mount Ninchurt, which they identified as the ruins of ancient defensive structures and an observatory.

The following year, V. Demin assembled the expedition “Hyperborea 98”, which included “specialists in anomalous phenomena” - witches, ufologists, psychics, etc. Their task was to penetrate the unsolved secrets of Seydozer - to discover a mysterious hole in the underground city, near whom Barchenko and his comrades photographed in 1921.

Unfortunately, they were unable to discover anything new. But folklore about the place “Russia, Murmansk region Lake Seydozero” was replenished with stories about the invisible Bigfoot, UFO landing sites and other sensations and assumptions of the expedition participants.

The next forced march of Demintsev took place in 2001. It was possible to prepare thoroughly. This time, among the participants, the number of which exceeded 20 people, there were divers with equipment for photo and video filming under water. The group was equipped with equipment: georadar-sonar, echo sounder, etc. Among the equipment was a motor boat with gasoline. Several tons of equipment were dropped onto Lake Seydozero by helicopter.

The purpose of the expedition was to test the hypothesis that a large number of ancient monuments are hidden at the bottom of Seydozero. Unfortunately, due to large silt deposits, underwater photography was not possible. The only thing that was found at the bottom was some “wells” overgrown with silt with a diameter of about 70 cm at a depth of 16 m and ring-shaped “cavities”.

Geophysical instruments discovered void caves under the relict clearing and tunnels leading from them under Mount Ninchurt. According to Demin, this was the mysterious dungeon mentioned in Lapp legends.

Demin spoke about all the secrets that Seydozero (Murmansk region) keeps, his hypotheses, and the progress of expeditions in more than 20 books.

The described artifacts - a relict clearing, a pyramid and, finally, Kuyva (Seydozero has been associated with them for several decades) gave rise to a whole wave of searches. Lovers of the unidentified, as well as simply tourists and travelers, flocked to Lake Seydozero.

What do researchers study and tourists strive to see on the shores of Seydozero? We have systematized information about the objects for which Seydozero is famous; reports on them were published by the expeditions mentioned above.

Seydozero: artifacts and their secrets

  • Relict clearing and paved road leading to it

Some “Hyperboreans” discovered a road made of smooth slabs that connects Lovozero and a relict clearing near Seydozero. Personally, I have not seen her on any of my visits, the first of which was in 1989.

At the entrance to the clearing (eastern side) there is a stone slab 3 * 3 m. Members of Demin's expedition consider the clearing - an area the size of a truck body, where there is no vegetation, to be a tunnel in rocky soil covered with loose rock.

According to them, a georadar examination of the road paving showed that it is masonry that goes underground 1.5 m at a right angle. Several hypotheses have been put forward: either it is some kind of wall, perhaps a defensive fortification sunk into the ground, or a 1.5-meter ditch filled to the bottom with boulders.

The length of the road is 1.5 km, it leads to the image of Kuyva.

All my searches for photographs of this road or videos of it have been unsuccessful.

  • Kuiva – rock carving of a man and a deer

The height of the image, which resembles a man with his arms spread out crosswise, is about 50 m. It was painted on one of the rocks. In the upper left corner you can see a much clearer deer than Kuiva. For some reason, researchers rarely mention it.

According to Lapp legend, Kuiva (Black Man) is the leader of a Swedish detachment that robbed local residents. The detachment was defeated by the Sami, and its leader was forever imprinted into a rock.

The image of Kuyva was found by Barchenko in 1921. It is visible from the paved road (which seems to draw a straight line between it and the sacred Horn Island located on neighboring Lovozero). Unfortunately, as I wrote above, I did not see the road; perhaps the imagination of the searchers passed it off as an ordinary moraine.

I climbed onto the rock itself and came close to the image. It seems to me that nature itself caused it with the help of water leaks, moss and cracks.

update from 01/01/2014 In August 2013, a student expedition from St. Petersburg State University worked on Seydozero. The rock samples collected by its participants from the dark fragments of the Kuyva image were subjected to mycological analysis, which showed that their coloring was the “work” of a colony of fungi and unicellular algae. The appearance of the pattern was also helped by the rock relief, which facilitates the spread of these microorganisms in such a bizarre artistic form.

  • Manhole underground (lost)

It was located in the immediate vicinity of the relict clearing or even on it itself. There is an archival photo of the expedition members against its background. Barchenko and his comrades did not have the courage to go underground through this hole. Condiain's diary noted the feeling of fear and anxiety they felt around him. According to Demin, he was buried on the initiative of the NKVD back in the 20-30s, because near Seydozero there were developments of uranium ores, which were carried out by prisoners from the Revdinsky camps. True, Demin mentions that the camp was located on the other side of the Seydozero lake at the entrance to the Chivruay gorge, and VOKhRA was located in a relict clearing.

I didn’t see any traces of the camp near Chivruay.

  • Step pyramids

Hills in the area of ​​Seydozero and Lovozero, similar to pyramids and, according to Barchenko, faceted by hand. Used by the Sami as a temple.

Found by Barchenko, but Kolbanovsky’s expedition, organized a year later, called them stone swellings on the top of the mountain.

  • Pyramid seid

Seid in the form of a stone stele, about 3 m high. There are several similar seids in the gorges around Seydozero; they say that they stood near the lake itself, but were dismantled in the 20s during the fight against obscurantism.

  • Ruins on Mount Ninchurt

Mount Ninchurt (Women's Breasts) - on its top, Demin's first expedition discovered ruins consisting of huge hewn slabs. The participants were especially struck by their correct form.

In addition to the slabs, the research expedition also discovered a well, steps, and the remains of a structure that Demin identified as an observatory - with a 15-meter-long trench looking into the sky. These secrets of Seydozero remained unsolved - Valery Demin, who was searching for Hyperborea, died in 2006.

Today you can see all these objects with your own eyes and evaluate their origin, in addition to enjoying the amazing beauty of these places and their pristine nature.

Useful articles:

Seydozero: how to get there

There are two transportation options: by train and by car.

By train you need to get to the Olenegorsk station; by the time the train arrives at the station, a bus to the village arrives. Revda. There are also many taxi drivers waiting here, offering to take you to Revda.

If you go by bus to Revda, you will have to look for a bus there or walk 1.5 hours (about 7 km). Therefore, a taxi is a more convenient option, since it takes you directly to the place (to the mine), and the payment for a passenger does not differ much from the price of a bus ticket.

Seydozero, how to get there by car. First, take the Murmansk highway M-18 to the roundabout to Olenegorsk, then turn right to Lovozero and Revda. Further 70 km along the Lovozero road to the turnoff to Revda. Drive through old Revda, then through the village itself and get to the Karnasurta mine.

There is a parking lot at the mine entrance where you can leave your car. Security guards at the checkpoint sometimes offer their services to “watch the car” for a small fee, but this option is not at all mandatory.

Route along the Lovozero tundra

Traditionally, tourists begin their hike with a visit to Seydozero. The shortest way to it is through the Elmorajok pass.

You need to go through the territory of the mine (where they are now allowed) straight through and straight, cross the narrow-gauge railway and follow a well-paved path up to the pass along the Ilmayok stream. The pass itself is not clearly defined; it is a large plateau between two flat peaks, with crushed stones of different sizes underfoot.

The descent to Seydozero is steeper than the ascent. The steep section ends in a relict clearing. From here begins the Elmorayok stream, which flows into the lake and a path leading through the forest to Seydozero. The approximate distance to this place from the mine is about 12 km.

Follow it to the shore - Kuyva appears on the rock on the left, Seydozero is under his protection. If you look back, you can see a small mountain shaped like a step pyramid.

Many beautiful gorges branch off from the shores of the lake; along any of them you can reach the mountains.

For example, along the river and the Chinglusuay gorge you can climb to the highest point of the Lovozero tundra - Mount Angvundaschorr 1120 m. And along the river and the Huelkuay or Chivruay gorge you can reach Mount Mannepakh, on the top of which there is a beautiful lake.

Seydozero itself is surrounded by forest, and while walking through it you can accidentally come across stone buildings, clearly made by human hands. They are overgrown with moss and bushes, so they are not immediately noticeable. You can also go to the outer side of the mountains and visit the mountain lakes: Tsirkovoe, Gornoe, Sengisyavr, Rayyavr, Svetloe, surrounded by “circuses” with steep walls up to 300 meters.

On the northern side of the lake there are two more gorges leading to the Kuyvchorr and Kuamdespakhk mountains along the tops of which there is a geological road to the mine. By the way, you can use it to get out of the mountains.

You can also go out to the village. Lovozero along a path that goes around the mountains along the shore of Lake Lovozero (Luvyavr).

Dmitry Ryumkin especially for

For many years, the world “elite” and its masters, using orthodox science as a tool to manipulate people’s consciousness, hid its true history from humanity. For this purpose, ancient written sources were destroyed, replaced with falsified forgeries, and numerous artifacts were ignored, including ancient megalithic structures, especially those related to the culture of Arctida (Hyperborea).

One of these amazing artifacts are the finds made in 1922 on the Kola Peninsula in the Seydozero region by A. Barchenko’s group, which included serious scientists. Megalithic structures and other traces of ancient Arctic civilization were discovered here. Here, for example, is what one of the participants in this expedition, astrophysicist A. Condiain, wrote in his diary:

Against a white, seemingly cleared background, a gigantic figure stands out, reminiscent of a human being with its dark contours. Motovskaya lip is amazingly, enormously beautiful. You have to imagine a narrow corridor two or three miles wide, bounded on the right and left by giant sheer cliffs up to one mile in height. There are mountains all around. Autumn decorated the slopes with clumps of birch, aspen and alder trees. In the distance lie gorges, among which is Seydozero.

In one of the gorges we saw a mysterious thing. Next to the snow, here and there in patches lying on the slopes of the gorge, a yellowish-white column like a giant candle could be seen, and next to it was a cubic stone. On the other side of the mountain one could see a gigantic cave, at an altitude of 200 fathoms, and next to it was something like a crypt. The outlines of the “Old Man” stood out clearly on the white ceiling of the mountain.

A luxurious path leads to the lake through Taibola. Or rather, a wide carriageway - it even seems that it is paved. At the end of the road there is a small hill. Everything suggests that in ancient times the grove was reserved, and the elevation at the end of the road served as an altar-altar in front of the “Old Man”.

However, instead of making these discoveries public, all members of the expedition were killed by the NKVD. The expedition of V. Demin, which visited these places in 1997, confirmed the presence of an entire ancient city here, which was once surrounded by Cyclopean stone walls and had its own observatory.

And here is how the Russian traveler, biologist and anthropologist G. Sidorov comments on all these finds:

The discovery on the Kola Peninsula overturns the traditional understanding of the history of earthly civilization. And what? Barchenko and his comrades are destroyed, their diaries are destroyed, as well as the book by A. Barchenko, written by him for Russia before the execution.

All threads leading to the find are cut off. In addition, under various pretexts, units of the NKVD are engaged in “combing” the Kostroma, Bryansk, Vyatka forests and forests of the north of Russia. Once again the authorities are trying to find the keepers of the secret. Of course, the crime can be blamed on the communists - now it has become fashionable.

But then why is free democratic science silent about this find, since in 1997 the ruins near Seydozero were visited by the expedition of V.N. Demin? And everything was confirmed - traces of ancient civilization are evident, but official scientific circles are in no hurry. Obviously, a refutation of the find is being considered; after all, it does not fit into the idea of ​​the development of earthly civilization. Time will tell what they will do with this find.

One thing is clear: the city found by A.V. Barchenko and V.N. Demin is older than all the civilizations of Asia and Africa, because it was once buried by a glacier, and the glacier on the Kola Peninsula melted only 10-12 thousand years BC.

But let the specialists in the destruction of ancient knowledge about Hyperborea not dream of burying the discovery of Barchenko and Demin, they will have to forget and bury too much. The fact is that the ruins of the Hierborean city discovered by Barchenko are just the beginning; other discoveries will follow.

The discovery made by the expeditions of A. Barchenko and V. Demin, like nothing else, best confirms the ancient Greek myths about the legendary Arctic country located “beyond Boreas,” as well as the myths of many other peoples of the white race about their Arctic ancestral home. And this is further proof that ancient legends and myths do not lie, but are openly lied to us by orthodox scientific historians, fulfilling the order of their masters to conceal and discredit ancient knowledge and our real history.

In recent years, attempts have been made to find the ancient country of Hyperborea, the mother of all world civilizations. Traces of her were found on the Kola Peninsula.

The first information about it dates back to ancient times. The most ancient historians mentioned the Hyperboreans. The word "Hyperborean" meant "one who lives beyond Boreas (North Wind)" or "one who lives in the north." According to ancient sources, the inhabitants of Hyperborea had a huge amount of knowledge, much more than the ancient Greeks. By the way, the ancient Greek heroes Apollo, Hercules and Perseus had the epithet “Hyperborean”.

Presumably, Hyperborea existed at the North Pole 20,000 - 4,000 years ago. It was a large continent with a fairly mild, Mediterranean-like climate. There were heat-loving animals and lush vegetation growing there. In its center - at the pole - was the legendary Mount Meru.

Scientists consider the annual migrations of migratory birds to be one of the proofs of the existence of this country.


The Hyperboreans had many skills - they knew how to control the weather, fly long distances (it was not for nothing that Perseus of Hyperborean was depicted with wings on his sandals), build large buildings and much more. They never got sick and lived without strife in endless happiness. If the inhabitants of Hyperborea were fed up with life, they ended their earthly journey by jumping into the sea from high cliffs.
Hyperborea died (went under water) due to some kind of cataclysm. According to one version, the cause of the death of the ancient civilization was the fall of a meteorite, the displacement of the Earth’s magnetic poles, and, as a consequence, a sharp change in climate and an increase in water levels in the world’s oceans.

Some researchers believe that the surviving Hyperboreans, who managed to move to the territory of northern Europe and Asia, spread throughout the world, forming new peoples. They built pyramids like those in Egypt, many temples like those in Greece, and erected Stonehenge and Arkaim. The Slavs, or as the learned Proto-Slavs call them, are considered one of the direct descendants of the Hyperboreans. The legendary northern continent is mentioned in many pagan myths of the Slavs. Tales of the Sunflower Country, located far away, are often found in Russian epics. The very name of the Kola Peninsula comes from the ancient Indo-European name for the Sun - Kolo. It is not for nothing that in his “Centuries” Nostradamus called the Russians nothing less than “the Hyperborean people.”

Many scientists have devoted themselves to the search for evidence of the existence of an ancient civilization. In 1595, Gerard Mercator published a map on which he indicated an unknown continent in the center of the Northern Ocean, and around it the shores of Eurasia and North America. This was preceded by a long, painstaking effort to study the remains of ancient maps and texts.

There is another mysterious document - the Piri Reis world map. Its creation dates back to 1513. All the continents are depicted with unusual precision, including the still undiscovered Antarctica, which was depicted without ice. Such accuracy was only possible using aerial photography. The continents on this map are not shown in their current position, but as they were located approximately 20,000 years ago.

The search for Hyperborea was also undertaken in Russia. In the 20th century, at the bottom of Seydozero on the Kola Peninsula, Russian researchers found the remains of ancient buildings and underground passages, and in the vicinity of the lake - numerous petroglyphs written in the ancient Indian language. Another recent discovery on the peninsula was the pyramids. An analysis of the data obtained from their study showed that the age of the pyramids is about 9000 years, that is, twice as old as the Egyptian ones. The Kola pyramids are located strictly along a west-east line and may have been used as an observatory.

The Kola Peninsula may turn out to be the ancestral home of one of the world's most ancient civilizations. This is confirmed by scientists who made a scientific expedition to the abandoned pyramids of the Russian North.

Several caves were also discovered here, going deep into the earth, when trying to enter which people begin to feel the strongest inexplicable horror. Hyperborea reliably keeps its secrets.

Here is what the scientist of the ancient world, Pliny the Elder, wrote about the Hyperboreans: “Behind the Hyperborean Mountains, on the other side of Aquilon, there lives a happy people who are called Hyperboreans, reach very advanced years and are glorified by wonderful legends. The sun shines there for six months, and this is only one the day when the sun does not hide from the spring equinox to the autumn one, the luminaries rise there only once a year at the summer solstice, and set only at the winter solstice. This country has a fertile climate and is devoid of any harmful wind. Death comes there only from satiety with life. There is no doubt in the existence of this people."

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