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  2. Alexander Golod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Golod

    Alexander Golod is a Ukrainian former defense contractor and current scientist and alternative healer, focusing on pyramid research.He has theorized that pyramid structures have energy forces that bring several benefits, for both man and the environment.

  3. Dolmens of the North Caucasus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dolmens_of_the_North_Caucasus

    Dolmen pyramid in Mamed Canyon. One of the most interesting megalithic complexes – group of three dolmens - stands in a row on a hill above Zhane River on the Black Sea coast in the Krasnodar area near Gelendzhik, Russia. In this area there is a great concentration of all types of megalithic sites including settlements and dolmen cemeteries.

  4. Shungite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shungite

    It was first described from a deposit near Shunga village, in Karelia, Russia, from where it gets its name. Shungite is most widely known for pseudoscientific and quack medical claims about its uses in medicine and technology, where it is claimed to have properties ranging from nebulous health benefits to blocking 5G radiation .

  5. Levashovism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levashovism

    Levashovism is a doctrine and healing system of Rodnovery (Slavic neopaganism) that emerged in Russia, formulated by the physics theorist, occultist and psychic healer Nikolay Viktorovich Levashov (1961–2012), one of the most prominent leaders of Slavic Neopaganism after the collapse of the Soviet Union. [3]

  6. Shigir Idol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shigir_Idol

    The Shigir Sculpture, or Shigir Idol (Russian: Шигирский идол), is the oldest known wooden sculpture. [1] [2] It is estimated to have been carved c. 11,500 years ago, or during the early Holocene period, and is twice as old as Egypt's Great Pyramid. [3] The wood it was carved from is approximately 12,000 years old. [4]

  7. List of World Heritage Sites in Russia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_World_Heritage...

    The monastery was founded by Saint Ferapont in 1398 in the inhospitable Russian North. The buildings date from the 15th to the 17th century, with a stone wall added in the 19th century. The monastery is a prime example of a Russian Orthodox monastic community from the period, and has been well preserved.

  8. Viktor Grebennikov - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viktor_Grebennikov

    Viktor Stepanovich Grebennikov (Russian: Виктор Степанович Гребенников; 23 April 1927 in Simferopol – 2001 in Novosibirsk) was a self-proclaimed Russian scientist, biologist, entomologist and paranormal researcher best known for his claim to have invented a levitation platform which operated by attaching dead insect body parts to the underside.

  9. Kozyrev mirror - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kozyrev_mirror

    A Kozyrev mirror (Russian: Зеркало Козырева, romanized: Zerkalo Kozyreva), in Russian esoteric literature from the 1990s, is a pseudoscientific device made from long sheets of aluminum (sometimes from glass, or a reflecting, mirror-like material) curled into a cylindrical spiral.