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14 hours ago answer added Christopher King timeline score: 0
15 hours ago comment added Mentalist TL;DR version: The melted rock is made to coat the tunnel walls, solving the problem of displaced earth and also reinforcing the tunnel structure.
15 hours ago comment added Mentalist Start by studying the history the elites try to bury: “They literally vitrify and melt/deflagrate the rock. It's a very sophisticated laser melting and deflagrating system. It reduces the rock to a powder and then melts the remaining rock as a coating on the inside of the base so you don't have to use gunite cements and other things like that.” From Phil Schneider's last lecture in 1995 (@11m23s) ...before he was killed. R.I.P
16 hours ago comment added François Jurain The Revised Bitur-Camember approach. The original approach was to let Camember dig a hole & dump the rubble there; then dig a 2nd hole to dump the rubble unearthed by digging the 1st hole. Whence, the revised approach: fr.liberpedia.org/fr/images/4/44/Sapeur6.jpg Bitur's line translates to: "You dumb mule! 4 days for not digging the 2nd hole large enough to contain its earth together with that of the 1st hole!".
yesterday history protected Monty Wild
yesterday answer added Seth Robertson timeline score: 0
yesterday history edited Kevin Kostlan CC BY-SA 4.0
deleted 16 characters in body
yesterday comment added TheDemonLord Not a serious answer - but have multiple people walk around the field, dropping handfulls at a time...
yesterday comment added John your best bet is to do what the US military did when they needed ot build an underground base in secret, build something else over the entrance and hide the digging as part of it. AKA the Greenbrier approach. this lets you hide everything, power, machinery, personel movement, and of course excavated material.
yesterday comment added John @Anketam if you can make blocks of stishovite without an explosion you can mass produce diamons bricks.
yesterday answer added Dewi Morgan timeline score: 1
yesterday answer added Pica timeline score: 1
yesterday comment added Theodore I think @John's comment above could be expanded into an excellent answer. The "earthworm" tunnel would end up with walls of Stishovite (maybe inside a transition layer) inside the native rock.
yesterday answer added Nuclear Hoagie timeline score: 2
yesterday answer added Anketam timeline score: 6
yesterday answer added Robert Rapplean timeline score: 2
yesterday comment added Robert Rapplean Who are they hiding the construction from? For instance, are they the local government, or are they hiding it from the government? How big/wealthy is the digging organization? Is it possible for them to purchase depleted mines and fill it in there?
yesterday comment added Kevin Kostlan @Anketam: Yes and current tech can do both. But there isn't a big market for Stishivite gemstones given it looks just like quartz.
yesterday answer added QuestionablePresence timeline score: 11
yesterday comment added JBH How deep are we drilling? How much are we drilling? Through what are we drilling?
yesterday answer added Klyis timeline score: 6
yesterday comment added QuestionablePresence @John that pushing would definitely be detectable. Not that regular drilling wouldn't be but I'd expect exerting this much force would increase detection range drastically. To the point where "detection" likely means" anyone standing on the ground in a 50km radius
yesterday answer added Thibe timeline score: 3
yesterday history became hot network question
2 days ago answer added SoronelHaetir timeline score: 19
2 days ago comment added John if you have the technology to silently make stishivite you can just push through the solid rock like an earthworm through loose soil. The pressures needed to make it are normally only found in meteorite impacts.
2 days ago history asked Kevin Kostlan CC BY-SA 4.0