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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.
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.
Sverdlovsk Regional Museum of Local Lore (Yekaterinburg, Sverdlovsk, Russia) 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 ...
Of these five, three are located in the present-day Russian Federation (or Russia): the monuments of Saint Petersburg (then called Leningrad), Kizhi Pogost, and Moscow Kremlin and Red Square. [ 4 ] As of 2024 [update] , there are 32 World Heritage Sites in Russia, with a further 31 sites on the tentative list.
The Valley of Ghosts (Russian: Долина привидений, Ukrainian: Долина привидів, Crimean Tatar: Hayalet vadiysi) is a valley located in Crimea [1] made up of naturally shaped rocks on the Southern Demirci mountain, located near Alushta city.
Name Born Died Specialization Achievements Aleksey Uvarov: 1825 1884 Dmitry Samokvasov: 1843 1911 Dmitry Nikolayevich Anuchin: 1843 1923 Nikodim Kondakov
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.
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]