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Earth Ancients

George Gele: Ancient America, The Lost City of Crescentis

Earth Ancients

Cliff Dunning

Social Sciences, Society & Culture, Science

4.62.9K Ratings

🗓️ 12 March 2022

⏱️ 93 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

ST. BERNARD PARISH, La. — An amateur archeologist says he’s discovered the ruins of an ancient civilization off the coast of St. Bernard Parish.

He claims there are large underwater granite mounds near the Chandeleur Islands that may have once been the site of the lost city.

The Chandeleur Islands are a chain of uninhabited barrier islands located in the Gulf of Mexico, 50 miles east of New Orleans.
Twelve thousand years ago, before a dramatic sea-level rise at the end of the last Ice Age, this area may have been dry land.

Retired architect George Gelé believes the site, now underwater was once a major city, predating the Maya, Inca, and Aztec civilizations in Mexico and in Central and South America. He dubbed the city “Crecsentis.”

“What’s down there are hundreds of buildings that are covered with sand and silt and that are geographically related to the Great Pyramid at Giza,” Gelé said.

Giza is a city in northern Egypt where ancient pyramids and the Sphinx are located.

Gelé claims to have found mysterious granite masses under Chandeleur Sound.

Granite is not native to Louisiana or Mississippi.

“Somebody floated a billion stones down the Mississippi River and assembled them outside what would later become New Orleans,” Gelé said.

Gelé has spent nearly 50 years studying the site.

He produced underwater sonar images of what he claims are remnants of major buildings, including a large pyramid.

“Which produces an electromagnetic energy that’s incredible,” Gelé said. “It is apparently 280 feet tall.”

St. Bernard Parish shrimper Ricky Robin says he’s experienced the energy firsthand. He claims the compass on his boat spun completely around near the area where Gelé pinpointed the tip of the pyramid and that’s not all.

“Everything will go out on your boat, all your electronics,” Robin said. “Like as if you were in the Bermuda Triangle. That’s exactly what we got here.”

Robin took Gelé on four excursions to the site.

He said for years local fisherman have talked about catching strange square rocks in their nets near the Chandeleur Islands.

“I thought right away it was pieces of the pyramid because it was right around where that compass spun,” Robin said.

There are other theories about the rocks.

One study by Texas A&M in the late 1980s suggests the masses are from shipwrecks or piles of ballast stones from Spanish or French vessels.

The stones may have been dumped overboard to lighten the weight of ships stuck on sandbars or entering shallower waters enroute to New Orleans.

Gelé said some of the artifacts collected at the site tell a different story.

"This is architecture,” he said pointing to one of the artifacts. “This is not ballast. This is the outer surface, and this is a rain gutter.”

People who believe in the granite mounds claim there is enough evidence that something is out there in the water. But they can’t explain how it got built, by who or why.

“The older people, we’ve seen a lot of things,” Robin said. “There’s a possibility it could be God knows what.”

“All I know is somebody built a city 12,000 years ago and it’s stuck out in Chandeleur,” Gelé said. “Whether or not they had someone on their shoulder who flew in with a UFO, I don’t know. All I know is they left a whole lot of granite rocks out there.”

Gelé has visited the site 44 times.

He hopes future dives, modern sonar technology and satellite imaging will help him unlock some of the secrets now trapped below 300 feet of silt, sand, and water off the coast of St. Bernard Parish.

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

I don't know about you, but when I hear about a lost city, anywhere in the world, I perk up.

0:07.6

I want to know more. Where is it located? What are they discovered? What are the specific artifacts

0:14.0

that have come from this location? Today, we're going to learn about ancient America and a lost

0:20.0

city off the Louisiana coast. This is a discovery that was been made a few decades ago. A little is

0:28.3

known about it simply because the scientific community, the orthodoxy, would rather leave it alone

0:35.6

and not dig too deep. My guest today has made significant inroads into discovering what he calls

0:43.6

Crescentis, the lost city off of the coast of Louisiana, very close to New Orleans and about 50

0:52.6

miles offshore. So significant is this discovery that independent archaeologists have made dives

1:00.2

and found artifacts that are groundbreaking, significant, and lead us to understand that there was

1:07.8

a city 12 plus thousand years ago in what is now present day Gulf of Mexico. All this and more

1:17.4

today on earth ancients.

1:47.8

For Saturday, March 12, 2022, this is earth ancients. I'm your host Cliff Dunning.

2:05.5

Hey, welcome to earth ancients. Hope you're doing well today. One of the big questions that is

2:10.9

posed here on earth ancients is what is under the water? We all know that there was a major asteroid hit

2:19.3

which caused much of the melting of the ice caps. Large portions of glacial packs were also

2:26.8

hit the result being the oceans rose. In some cases, several hundred feet. And we get

2:34.5

inklings of what we're missing, what has been destroyed or lost to us. When we hear from people like

2:43.6

Darryl Meklos off the coast of Florida, the Bimini Islands, and what he found was a city of some kind.

2:51.2

We're waiting to hear more from him. Graham Hancock talking about DeWorka off the coast of India,

2:57.2

which has been tentatively dated to about 9,000 BC. And other sites like Japan's Yoganani Island,

3:06.4

and it's underwater temple. And it seems like there is a great deal that we just do not know of

3:15.1

because we can't see it. And under the water is a gold mine. And today, our guest is going to talk

...

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