20 Impossible Artifacts Found in Coalmines

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Coal mines are some of the oldest structures that humans have built. We’ve been digging up the ground in search of black gold for thousands of years! And a lot of crazy things have come out of the ground, not only coal! From the iron pot that some claim is 300 million years old to the mysterious spheres left behind by aliens, here’s
20 Impossible Artifacts Found in Coalmines

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My husband has worked in the coal mines for 32 years. Over these years he has brought me fossils he has found. I have a lot of ferns and one bone. I love this man.

stacynapier
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Grandpa had a homestead house in the prairie near Galva ND. It had a huge central heat furnace in the basement. Before delivery was established he had to dig his coal from an exposed seam in the hills.
Over the years when he had to clean out the ashes he would find strange metal objects like badges, medals and bent up pieces of iron. A few of the badges had unknown, barely legible symbols on them. He had them all on the windowsill and showed them to me when I was young. He told me of the Native belief that there were earlier inhabitations on earth that had been destroyed by cataclysm. And the items were from them.

johnwick-iiil
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My father, brothers and I have recovered thirty five of the alloy spheres from the foothills of the Smokies. There's all kinds of amazing things we've found, the best being the diamonds and other kinds of gem stones. A particular secluded area were working now has yielded six and a half ounces of gold since last summer

tommyholt
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Look the Smithsonian, has all these items.
The sole purpose of the smithsonian was to secure and bury all artifacts from the 1st and 2nd civilizations.

cb
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Why this irritating music so that you can not hear what is being said?

JongJande
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I did not see the box tree octapus on the thumbnail...

zusclhz
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You will not find these missing items at the Smithsonian because they deny their existence.
We really need the Smithsonian to come forward with their hidden away artifacts.

SwampDonkey
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Just imagine the stuff that Wasn't found and got burned up for heat.

popcorn
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The little pot is a crucible to melt metal in, those are pouring spouts on either side

kennethhamby
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The urge to insert lies into evidence is spiritual. It never dies.

michaelmokotong
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When I was in high school, I had a holiday job where my father worked on the surface at a coal mine. I had a job in the screens where coal brought uphill from the adit by conveyor belt was sorted by size by metal screens with holes of different sizes before going into railway wagons.
On the screens, our job was to remove broken drillbits, stones, miners lunch wrappers, and dead pigeons and possums from the coal. No ooparts, but once, a large block of coal came up the conveyor belt that had the perfect print of a large fern on it in a very shallow bas relief
At other times, huge disks of mudstone came up the belt, they were mud deposits from old swamps, compressed and hardened underground.

captainsensiblejr.
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My favorite part was where the guy was chasing the elephant with the spear. LMAO that was so hilarious

waxore
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A modern hammer, dropped 100 years ago and the stone grew around stone grew around it, , , couldn't be an old artifact, we have stone that grows in a 100 years....what planet are you from.

MercyandTruthBibleChurch
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If you put a cubist octopus as the teaser picture for your video, for Pete's sake, GIVE US a cubist octopus in the video

ellenkuhfeld
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having worked in a West Virginia coal mine I can tell you for sure that a lot of fossils come out of them. they call them kettle bottoms. popular theory is that lakes turned into bogs and fish were trapped there, trees fell or grew in the bog and animals wandered in and got stuck and died there. these peat moss bogs dried up and eventually turned into coal.the things that weren't moss, especially but not limited to animal matter, decomposed at a different rate than the surrounding moss and created fish, plant and animal shaped holes in the surrounding matter and got filled with rain washed sediment of a different material which turned to stone as the bog turned to coal. this creates perfect impressions of whatever was caught in the bog made of a much harder stone than the surrounding coal and these kettle bottoms can usually be removed whole unless they are very large. just about every home in West Virginia has a kettle bottom of some kind that they use as door stops etc. most are tree trunks or leaf patterns but I have seen strange looking fish also.

brianfrank
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could do with a lot less music and volume

jamesvillone
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Nothing new under the sun... mother nature is Really interesting.

popcorn
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Thanks for this. It would be better without the distraction of the music.

jys
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Someone dropped the hammer 🔨 about one hundred years ago, and...the rocks "grew" up around it...🤣🤣🤣🤣 We've just seen SO much evidence of that in the last one hundred years, it's... undeniable.

alancadieux
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"The water could have HARDENED and pushed the pot into the coal over

budgie