The forbidden zone on Earth, or what is known as the North Pole.
The forbidden zone on Earth, or what is known as the North Pole. 1--333
It is possible, of course, to believe and believe that it is a restricted area, because the scientists and people who have visited this area, in addition to the very convincing aerial footage that there is actually no land in the Arctic,
There is debate about where the North Magnetic Pole actually is located.
We always see pictures of wonderful scenery that illustrate the beauty and magnificence of the region, and we also see that it is a tundra or completely icy area.
An area where there is no life of any kind, no plants grow because there is no land or soil, but it is completely icy.
This is exactly what we were told about the Pole region.
In order to get there, we must sail the ship, preferably of course, an icebreaker.
?But what is the truth behind the North Pole
In ancient cosmology, ancient cultures knew that in the magnetic center of the North Pole, or the center of the Earth, there is a huge magnetic mass called Mount Meru.
The mountain had several names according to cultures, for example in Sumerian traditions it was called Mount Sumeru, and in Persia they called it Mount Bereziti.
In Chinese cultures, it was called Khun Lun Mountain, or a bronze column rising to the sky. Also, the Turkmen people in Turkestan knew of the existence of the mountain as an electromagnetic mountain and depicted it as a copper column rising to the sky.
The Mongols believed in the existence of the mountain and called it Semper or Suter, and they depicted it with a giant Zambo tree at the top.
Siberians and ancient Egyptians were aware of the existence of the magnetic mountain.
In Greek culture, they always talked about Mount Olympus, and this name is what they meant by the huge magnetic mountain.
There were several books in the 14th century that contained precise descriptions of the polar region, such as the Magnetic Island or Ropes Nigra surrounded by a giant vortex and four large continents.
Books talk about the magnetic mountain being so powerful that it pulled nails straight out of explorers' boats.
They mentioned that the huge vortex and the four rivers surrounding the mountain change every six hours, and this is what leads to the occurrence of tides, and they compared them as if they were the inhaling and exhaling breaths of the seas.
On the most famous map of the North Pole, Mercator's map, which still exists today.
In 1569 Mercator made a topographical map of the North Pole showing an iron mountain in the center called "Mt. Rubis Nigra" with four rivers separating four large continents.
Are we being lied to about what actually exists at the magnetic North Pole!!!
Mercator depicts the North Pole in four large pieces separated by channels of flowing water, which meet in the middle in a giant vortex.
Mercator referred to two 16th-century explorers, Martin Frobisher and James Davis, who reached what is now northern Canada.
Each of them documented their experiences with strong currents that, they said, dragged giant icebergs as if they were nothing. "Without stopping, it is transported north, where it is absorbed into the bowels of the earth," Mercator wrote on his original map.
Mercator described each piece on the pole. The section at the bottom right was supposed to be home to "four-foot-tall dwarves" - mentioned in the 14th century as the original inhabitants of Lapland Finland.
As for the areas located to the lower left of the Magnetic Mountain, there was a race of giants inhabited, who were mentioned in the memoirs of Olaf Jansen during his wondrous journey to the North Land.

After Mercator's death in 1594, explorers continued to search for the truth about the North Pole, and by 1636, modern maps of the region showed the entire region without Mercator's four regions, the magnetic mount, and the central vortex.
As we look at modern maps of the Arctic, and wonder what changes lie ahead,
In 1587, Urbano Monte created a map of the world consisting of 60 manuscripts. The magnificent map depicts the Magnetic Mountain and the surrounding islands with intricate details and decorations.
In 1577, Mercator referred to an expedition that took place around 1360, led by an Englishman from Oxford. The goal of this daring expedition was to venture beyond Greenland and explore the magnetic mountain.
Noting strong channels and currents, the expedition's report became conclusive proof of the existence of the magnetic mountain.
The monk accompanying the English expedition described the channels and whirlpools that surrounded the magnetic mountain. He says its strong currents made it impossible for ships to turn back, creating a sense of mystery and danger.
In the middle of the enclosed sea surrounding the Magnetic Mountain lies a magnificent area described as one of the most magnificent areas in the North.
Furthermore it, It is said that there is a vortex from which the four inner seas of the pole flow. These features add to the excitement surrounding the magnetic mountain.
The book is a travelogue written by a Franciscan friar from Oxford in the 14th century
He traveled to the North Atlantic region in the early 1460s, making about six trips to conduct business on behalf of the King of England (Edward III).
He described what he found on his first voyage to the islands beyond 54 degrees north in a book entitled Inventio Fortunata, which he presented to the king.
Unfortunately, by the time Atlantic explorers were looking for information in the 1890s, the book was gone!!!
The contents of the book were only known through a summary in another book by a man named James Knuwen or Jacob Van Wwen.
Knoen's summary was the basis for depicting the Arctic region on many maps.
. By the late 16th century, the Book of Knoen was also lost, and most of what we know about their contents is in a letter from the Flemish cartographer Gerardus Mercator to the English astronomer John Dee. Dated April 20, 1577, it is now in the British Library.
Greenland was first settled by order of King Arthur, who conquered the North Atlantic islands. It also refers to the incoming seas, which are the currents that attract ships towards the north.
Mercator says nearly 4,000 people entered the inland seas and never returned.
But in 1364 AD, eight of these people returned to the king's court in Norway.
Among them were two priests, one of whom was carrying an astrolabe. He comes from the fifth generation of the family of a Brussels citizen.
All eight of them were among those who penetrated the northern regions in the first ships.
Of the visiting Franciscans,
The priest left the rest of the party that came to the islands, and traveled farther over the whole north, etc., and wrote down all the wonders of those islands, and gave the king of England this book, which he called the Latin invention Fortunatae.”
In fact, the "book" may have been a detailed report, intended mainly to highlight the commercial possibilities offered by the North Atlantic after the decline of Norwegian interest in its colonies.
The Mercator Map or Mount Momero is not a mythical place at all, but it actually exists on Earth, and was depicted on climate maps...


Source: websites