More pines-related silliness from the Discovery Channel. Watched this last night, part of the "What on Earth" series. Following a common pattern for this series, they show aerial imagery of something unusual and then come up with all kind of ridiculous "theories" about what it might be. More often than not, these are well-known locations where there's no mystery about what they are. This one just had to be good....
I wonder what that "gigantic oval" could possibly be? An archeologist and several other "experts" don't know but have some hilarious theories. Well, here it is... what's your theory?
https://boydsmaps.com/#16.00/39.603647/-74.740987/pines1995/0.00/0.00
In all fairness, once they got past the silly part I actually learned a few things. I thought "Amatol" was just the name of the munitions plant but, in fact, it's a type of explosives made from Ammonium Nitrate.
There were also some interesting things about the Atlantic City racetrack, including historical footage of its construction and some races. I also wasn't aware of the term "murderdromes" that was (apparently) given to these slippery old wooden racetracks because of the number of fatalities (both on the track and in the audience).
All in all, kind of a fun watch if you can access it through your cable or streaming service.
Legend of Moonshine Forest
Satellite images capture a gigantic oval among a bizarre grid pattern that's carved into the dense forests of New Jersey; experts investigate and reveal a landscape linked to infamous prohibition activity and a prolific WWI munitions factory.
www.discovery.com
I wonder what that "gigantic oval" could possibly be? An archeologist and several other "experts" don't know but have some hilarious theories. Well, here it is... what's your theory?
https://boydsmaps.com/#16.00/39.603647/-74.740987/pines1995/0.00/0.00
In all fairness, once they got past the silly part I actually learned a few things. I thought "Amatol" was just the name of the munitions plant but, in fact, it's a type of explosives made from Ammonium Nitrate.
Amatol - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
There were also some interesting things about the Atlantic City racetrack, including historical footage of its construction and some races. I also wasn't aware of the term "murderdromes" that was (apparently) given to these slippery old wooden racetracks because of the number of fatalities (both on the track and in the audience).
All in all, kind of a fun watch if you can access it through your cable or streaming service.