World's largest Man Made Things



1>World’s Largest Indoor Swimming Pool Alberta, Canada – 5 Acres


World's largest Man Made Things

2>World’s Largest Office Complex, Chicago Merchandise Mart, Illinois, USA

World's largest Man Made Things
3>World’s Largest Shopping Mall
Gross Leasable Area: 7.1 Million Square Feet
With wind mills, theme parks, and a replica of the Arc de Triomphe


World's largest Man Made Things
4>World’s Longest Cross Sea Bridge Donghai Bridge, China – 32.5 kilometers


World's largest Man Made Things
5>World’s Highest Statue
Christ The Redeemer Statue – RIO D.J. Brazil


World's largest Man Made Things

6>World’s Costliest Stadium
New Wembley Stadium, London, England – 90,000 Capacity Cost $1.6 billion

World's largest Man Made Things
7>World’s Largest Complex Inter-Change
Interstate 10 Highways Interchange – Houston, Texas


World's largest Man Made Things

8>World’s Biggest Excavator
Built by KRUPP of Germany 45,500 tons, 95 meters high, 215 meters long


World's largest Man Made Things
9>World’s Largest Mosques Shah Feisal mosque, Islamabad, Pakistan
35,000 Inside Hall Capacity – 150,000 Outside Overflow Capacity


World's largest Man Made Things



10>World’s Most Expensive Hotel
Burj Al Arab Hotel, Dubai – only 7 Star Hotel in the World


World's largest Man Made Things




























12>World’s Biggest Roman Catholic Cathedral Ivory Coast




World's largest Man Made Things
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the Guernsey underground hospital

the Guernsey underground hospital
Alan Cheale from Brighton sent this photo (above) to the Guernsey Press.

‘I stayed in Guernsey two years ago. My son and I visited the Underground Hospital and took photographs,’ he wrote.

‘One was very strange. A close look and there seems to be two people together. There was nobody around in that area at the time it was taken.

The camera used was a digital Olympus C2.’

Below are enhanced versions of the image...provided by SW

the Guernsey underground hospital
the Guernsey underground hospital
the Guernsey underground hospital
the Guernsey underground hospital



the Guernsey underground hospital






















































THE GUERNSEY UNDERGROUND HOSPITAL

This is the largest remaining structure from the Occupation in the Channel Islands. Almost invisible from the surface the tunnel complex covers 7000 square metres.

All you can see above ground is the entrances and the square holes which are the the escape shafts.

Construction started in the winter of 1940 - the first winter of the Occupation.

The tunnels were dug out by hundreds of slave workers from France, Spain, Morocco, Algeria, Belgium, Holland, Poland, Russia and Guernsey.

The Guernseymen refused to work after a rock fall killed six Frenchmen and were transferred elsewhere.

The slave labourers were given a simple choice - work or starve. Any who were too weak to work were sent to a detention camp in Alderney.

To dig the tunnels the workers had to use not only explosives and pneumatic drills but picks, shovels, sledge hammers and bare hands.

The German Military Underground Hospital and Ammunition Store took three and a half years of work before it was ready.

One grave digger had to bury seventeen workers killed in an explosion. They joined 37 men and women in a cemetery adjoining a workers' camp at Les Vauxbelets.

Some of the granite excavated was used in the concrete. Amongst the 15,000 tons of concrete was British cement captured at Dunkirk.

The rest of the stone was transported along the light railway tracks in the tunnels and dumped acroos the road.

The granite was thrown into the valley and the ground level was raised as a result.

Work stopped when the D-Day battle began.

The hospital was built in two sections

The channels in the floors were not properly finished and are to deal with the damp which must have been a problem from the start.

Entrances were camouflaged to blend in with the surrounding countryside.

The 2nd larger section was also built as wards with an extra corridor in the middle which was blocked, increasing the storage area.

There were three tunnel entrances and five ventilation shafts with iron ladders or concrete steps so they could be used as emergency exits.

They range in depth from 45 feet to 75 feet. The 75 foot shaft has a reservoir dug into one side which could hold thousands of gallons of water.

The water was pumped into the reservoir from the nearby well and gave the compound an independent water source.

During the construction many German wagons were used on Guernsey roads drawn by French and Belgian horses.

After the liberation the British government sold off the wagons and horses.

Sources:
www.bbc.co.uk
www.detecting.org.uk
www.thisisguernsey.com
www.naturalplane.blogspot.com/
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This guy paints himself-no trick photography ,no photoshop ,he just paints himself…

invisible man
invisible man
invisible man
invisible man
invisible man
invisible man
invisible man
invisible man
invisible man
invisible man
invisible man
This guy paints himself… no trick photography … no photoshop …he just paints himself…

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Illusion Pics- Face of Jesus or Child sitting in the Lap

Jesus
























This photo was found on http://paranormal.about.com/.It was subsequently picked up by other websites and blogs, most notably by Richelle Hawks, who analyzed it and found other peculiar shapes and faces in it.

At first glance, the old photo shows a couple in an outdoor setting. Almost at once, a large face jumps out at us. With its long hair, mustache and and beard, it looks like a familiar portrait of a Jesus-like figure in profile.

But that's just an illusion. Look more carefully, and the Jesus face is actually a small child, dressed in white, sitting on the man's lap. The child's white cap forms the figure's forehead, and the child's right sleeve and arm form his nose and mustache. Foliage and other elements that are too dark to make out create the illusion of the figure's hair and beard. Stunning!

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Snakes eats a Man alive

The picture below was taken in Malaysia and printed in a local magazine there. The reticulated python could not totally eat the person. An adult human's shoulders present a real difficulty to the biggest snake. Whether the person previously was dead or was killed by the snake remains unknown.


snakes eat man alive

The two pictures below obviously are of poorer quality and detail than the ones above. The pictures above also seem to have been in circulation several years before the ones below appeared. The lump appears to be of a stocky animal such as a pig rather than of a person. The person's body has very little mucus on it for having been inside a snake. Those who keep snakes well know how slimy food items get, especially when a snake regurgitates. It's difficult to ascertain where his arms are; one of them should be lying right along his side, since they would have to fold that way during the snake's feeding.

His arms may be extending up into the snake to open a path for his head and chest. The upper torso appears to be within a bag inside the snake. The python's stomach and/or intestine also seem to have disappeared. Most experts suspect that these were staged photographs, though I have to give the man credit for crawling that far into the snake. In any event, no news service has ever carried a story relating to these photographs … and it would have made a great story. Some Internet sites with information on these pictures are:








snakes eat man alive
snakes eat man alive


The pictures below allegedly document a recent incident of a snake eating a person. The accompanying stories vary as to victim (local child, camper, or oil rig crew member) and location (South America with the snake an anaconda, Borneo, and Singapore). The snake is a reticulated python.


snakes eat man alive
snakes eat man alive

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