Staffordshire Subterranean Tunnel

265 views
Skip to first unread message

Wayne J

unread,
Oct 18, 2013, 4:23:24 AM10/18/13
to dark-star...@googlegroups.com
Hello now here looks like some fun XD, this friends is somewhere near me, so i'll make you a deal, if anybody has any idea's or is any good with sat data, you maybe able to find this, and with a pack of man size huggies pull ups, i'll go down with vid camera and get you all the gory details, if we find it i'll send the video to those who participated first to do with as what they please! hows that for a deal lol???

i can't find the original pages i read on this but Greg Jenner did some work on this.


ENGLAND 

The Staffordshire, England Entrance 
Somewhere in Staffordshire, England a lonely field exists in which a laborer discovered a large iron plate beneath the dirt. The "hatch" was large and oval, with an iron ring mounted on it. This entrance led into the tunnels. The field is in a valley surrounded on almost all sides by woods. The laborer was digging a trench for some purpose. The incident was reported in "A History of Staffordshire" by Dr. Plot, who wrote the book in the late 1700s. It may be possible to find the entrance if it can be ascertained exactly which valley the laborer was digging in.

Wayne J

unread,
Oct 18, 2013, 4:29:42 AM10/18/13
to dark-star...@googlegroups.com
P.S. im sure Andy would enjoy getting his hands dirty on this one lol its his work too, its not too far from him either, maybe make a team if we can find some positive locations...

Wayne J

unread,
Oct 18, 2013, 4:51:49 AM10/18/13
to dark-star...@googlegroups.com
here is one big ass hole in the ground near me, when at college in Dudley (1991) i found out about the seven sisters cave, i didn't believe how big this thing was, well of course, back then it was accessible, so me being me got my buns in there lol,  The cathedral gallery is an understatement, that thing could of held a cathedral and probably housing for a few hundred people lmao, it was beautiful though in a kinda weird natural way!

wayne james

unread,
Oct 19, 2013, 4:44:52 AM10/19/13
to dark-star...@googlegroups.com
been searching for this and found something quite suspect! 

its a nature reserve called parrots drumble in Staffordshire. this place interested me as a contender to the location, lets look at the name as its pretty strange itself then we will look at why i think its a contender.

• PARROT (verb)
  The verb PARROT has 1 sense:

1. repeat mindlessly

  Familiarity information: PARROT used as a verb is very rare.


Drumble

Drum"ble\, v. i. [See Drumly.]

1. To be sluggish or lazy; to be confused. [Obs.] --Shak.

 2. To mumble in speaking. [Obs.]


so the name parrots drumble means "repeat mindlessly confused" did the lord of the estate who employed the trencherman name the area to mark it and decided to cover up the evidence?


thats the first sign i got, so i looked deeper into it and then found the woodland here is said to of been planted steadily since the 1600's......and something more important is happening at this place, the stream, the stream is red with iron oxides, iron oxides build up from rust, 400 years is long enough to corrode a large iron plate hidden under or near a water flow. The worker was digging a trench in a valley for the owner, ask yourself what reasons would you dig a trench in a valley? to direct water flow down the valley maybe? foundation for a building but this doesn't make sense, im sure the owner of the land would know its not the wisest place to build anything as it would be susceptible to subsidence due to the boggy land and it would be more than one man to dig a foundation. did the owner cover it over and finish his new stream flow for fresh waters?


http://nwrstaffsway2012.blogspot.co.uk/2012/05/no-parrots-in-parrots-drumble.html


The unusual name is because the land used to belong to the Parrot family. Drumble is the name for a wooded valley and the red stream is the result of iron oxide leaching from local mineral workings....or so it says on the website! It is quite near to an industrial estate, but it feels very sylvan, although I would not have been surprised to see a dinosaur emerge from the red swamp!


Inline image 1


Thats  the waters there, its difficult to judge in this location as there are old iron mines present near this location so its iffy. but a water reading may shed some light on where this iron is coming from!



--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Dark Star Planet X" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to dark-star-plane...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to dark-star...@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/dark-star-planet-x.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.

parrotsdrumble 009.JPG

wayne james

unread,
Oct 19, 2013, 7:13:54 AM10/19/13
to dark-star...@googlegroups.com
here is some old maps of Staffordshire.


this one shows a location named crank wood, surounded by forest on almost all sides. its just north west of the centre of the map


and an article about this place is here.

parrotsdrumble 009.JPG
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages