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Band of Holes

The satellite view shows this off much better than Wikipedia's ground-level picture. It Really is just a long band of holes dug into the side of a mountain.

https://www.google.com/maps/place/13%C2%B042'20.0%22S+75%C2%...

20 hours agoslongfield

That’s a lot of holes.

It seems obvious to me they were made by the landing pylons of heavy-lift alien spacecraft.

16 hours agonandomrumber

Even more holes than Blackburn, Lancashire.

At 1m diameter and 75cm deep, so ~0.59m^3, I calculate that to fill the Albert Hall, which a search suggests "has been estimated at" ~100,000m^3 (feels low to me, but it's quoted in many places), it takes around 170,000 of these Peruvian holes.

14 hours agoomnicognate

There’s an Albert Hall where I live, it’s probably much smaller than its name sake.

I think we can fill it.

14 hours agonandomrumber

Reminds me of one of my favorite horror stories (NSFW):

https://imgur.com/gallery/lni-enigma-of-amigara-fault-junji-...

20 hours agosurprisetalk

Obviously the rescuers should have just used a stick and push them back until they are de-deformed by undergoing the reverse process, on a serious note I think the author should have gone further, one is that it should show a pregnant lady going into one of the holes, just to put that mental image in the readers, and second, it should have a bonus page where we are shown that the bodies melt into the ground once they make it out, and then when they seem like they are dead they make a strange sound until the rescuers conclude that are trying to say "kill me"

13 hours agoAmbroseBierce

That was rather good, thank you!

16 hours agoEdwardDiego

DRR DRR DRR…

16 hours agomock-possum

I think it's either some animal trap (birds nest, small mammal, insect) or some plant growing area or maybe moisture harvesting.

12 hours agodvh

Blackburn, Lancashire best catch up