Ingolstadt, Germany 48°45'48.28" N 11°25'14.72" E
The pictures below were taken in 1954, as documented on the NCAP site (www.ncap.org.uk).
I thinks it's best to let the pictures do the talking.
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The above pic is of a much larger format than displayed here - right click the picture and select 'save image as...' and download it to your device. You'll then be able to view it in much clearer detail.
Here's the sats and auxs identified so far - (there may be more, that I missed)
Please 'save image as...' with the above pic as well and add any that I may have missed and re-upload to this thread. Thanks.
And here's a high altitude shot of the western side of the Ingolstadt area that shows further sats and auxs circling or in close proximity to the city (I may start referring to auxs as 'oggs' - it's a lot easier to say and possibly understand)
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Some 1954 closer shots of the various sats and oggs and the co-ordinates of where they are (or were):
co-ords: 48°41'34.94" N 11°27'15.73" E
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48°42'54.45" N 11°30'45.88" E (now gone)
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48°44'15.96" N 11°31'30.72" E (still visible today, under trees)
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48°46'41.47" N 11°27'55.69" E - a sat and a mini-ogg.
This is quite interesting, because part of the shape of the housing estate built on top of the the sat mimics the shape of the sat exactly.
As do the buildings and general area of the structures placed over the top of the mini-ogg:
48°46'26.53" N 11°28'10.89" E
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48°47'57.69" N 11°22'45.40" E
There may be more 'going on' in the pic above than at first seems apparant. There is, of course, two sats - the one on the left still present today (under trees) and one on the right which is now gone. But there are also two other possible structures, highlighted by arrows. These may be mini-oggs, approximately 60m in width, very easy to dismantle or recycle by our civilisation. Today, they are rather conspicuous amongst the fields as areas of trees - why are they not fields? Why are they where they are?
If you consider for a moment that most roads were once canals - and that these canals were interspersed with various sats, oggs and mini-oggs, you will find many thousands of examples of these anomolies worldwide.
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48°49'00.17" N 11°24'34.91" E
Above: sat gone, now the southern end of a small town (good foundations - I'd buy a house on that plot!)
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One more thing while we're looking at Ingolstadt - and I'll have to take a minute to explain this - I believe the StarCiv wanted their reality to be as stunningly beautiful to the eye as could possibly be - and to this end they loved to create what I call 'the ox-bow anomoly' (and Colm calls 'whorls') - and there are some fantastic examples of this at Ingolstadt (and also just across the way at Karlsruhe - I'll save those pics for an ox-bow anomoly thread).
I've highlighted a few on the pic above (which can be seen in much greater detail by using 'save image as...')
There are many, many ox-bow anomolies around Ingolstadt. I theorise that they diverted the course of rivers to create this effect before taming the river for use as a canal.
They liked to fill the circular shape created with geometrically centred fields (this may even have been beneficial in some way towards the generation of energy, that I'm now convinced was the primary use of the larger field systems). I say 'larger field systems' because I have now identified what I call 'mini-field systems' that were more likely for the use of growing crops. More on 'mini-fields' later.
A stunning example of an almost pristine ox-bow anomoly:
and another:
Ingolstadt, Germany - now updated
Re: Ingolstadt, Germany - now updated
Great work Fenton. I had to have yet another look at the area, what a fine example of a Star City and Sats. I also had to check out what Wiki(d) had to say about it...are you ready for it? "Originally a fortress city, Ingolstadt is enclosed by a medieval defensive wall". A reminder of their definition of medieval, "the period between the 5th and 15th centuries". The inconsistency of their fairy tales has the consistency of diarrhea. Most of you readers will already know that there is a total fabrication of history, but for those who are not yet aware, this is a prime illustration of the impossibility of "his" version of the past.
I have pinned 16 satellites and suspect many other locations as being oggs. If you have my KMZ file take a close look at Ingolstadt 7 (coordinates 48°47'13.93"N 11°31'37.97"E if you don't have the KMZ). There is a 360° photo on GE taken from the entrance bridge that captures most of the 300+ M red brick & cut stone facade of an earth-and-lawn-roofed complex. This complex has an area of nearly 25,000 square metres, has two visible storeys, and we don't know how deep it goes. Now, remember that you are looking at just one detail of a vastly bigger picture in this area that is repeated hundreds of times elsewhere. The mind boggles!
I have pinned 16 satellites and suspect many other locations as being oggs. If you have my KMZ file take a close look at Ingolstadt 7 (coordinates 48°47'13.93"N 11°31'37.97"E if you don't have the KMZ). There is a 360° photo on GE taken from the entrance bridge that captures most of the 300+ M red brick & cut stone facade of an earth-and-lawn-roofed complex. This complex has an area of nearly 25,000 square metres, has two visible storeys, and we don't know how deep it goes. Now, remember that you are looking at just one detail of a vastly bigger picture in this area that is repeated hundreds of times elsewhere. The mind boggles!
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Re: Ingolstadt, Germany - now updated
Nice. 3 rings outside of the city wall. Identical to Kaunas in Lithuania.