Assalam o Alaikum friends.
Here i you have to post an image of a Holy place or interesting site/object and the next user will have to guess the place name and details about it.
Hope we will increase our knowledge about these Holy things and places around the world.
here we go:
Last edited by Muhammad; 02-02-2013 at 04:35 PM.
Reason: Best to avoid mentioning holy graves or holy things due to practices of shirk associated with them and non-verifiable info
The first picture is in Egypt. It is said that Egyptian people were very very tall so they could list the stones to the Pyramids and this is an excellent picture that shows this indeed! Thank for sharing!
they do the archaelogical entries competition every 6 months, and there are hundreds of entries. I seen the pic you posted, and it is a fake. I'm sorry but its true.
In particular, as well told here , very popular on the internet is a hoax concerning the finding of giant skeletons that is accompanied by information seem to be very detailed and credible but they are built from scratch. The hoax was circulated on the internet in several versions, they see the excavations located from time to time in India, Saudi Arabia or South America. The news, in an attempt to appear more credible, with the phrase that the excavation is forbidden to all visitors except at National Geographic, and also has the inevitable photomontages that originated from the competitions from the site http://www.worth1000. com , especially the photo more present is this: http://www.worth1000.com/entries/18533/giants (the image, signed IronKite, competed in the "Archaeological Anomalies")
In 2007, the news of the existence of the giants was officially denied by National Geographic in an interesting article: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/n...-skeleton.html
in that year the joke, which started in 2004, it enjoyed a revival and continued to bounce on the internet, forcing them to intervene.
The article also talks about the Indian Hindu Voice monthly, in March of that year had given much prominence the false event without checking the sources: the director P. Deivamuthu, interviewed by National Geographic, admitted his mistake.
I hate busting bubbles. Sorry...
what beats me is, it's not even a good fake. I think I should give this a go. I've already partook in some of worth1000's competitions, but the level of creative talent there is far superior to mine.
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