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Chapter 1666 True and False

Han Kongque nodded and said: "It shouldn't be the location of the mausoleum. However, this is not completely unrelated to the mausoleum. I think this should be the entrance to the mausoleum."

"The entrance to the mausoleum?" Mu Ling looked at Han Peacock in surprise, thinking he was joking.

"Yes, although this place is huge, it is not the location of the mausoleum, but a confusing entrance. I think the burial place should be here, but the mausoleum is not here." Han Kongque said.

"Underground passage?" Huangshan immediately responded.

"It's too obvious here. With Genghis Khan's talent and strategy, how could it be possible to leave such a flaw and let people find his tomb?" Han Kongque said.

The location of the tomb is protected by a two-mile-long wall. With such an obvious feature, how could it be possible according to the Mongolian secret burial system?

The royal family of the Yuan Dynasty implemented a secret burial system, that is, the burial location of the emperor's tomb was not marked, announced, or recorded.

There is such an obvious stone wall here, and it is guarded to prevent people from entering casually. Doesn't it mean that there is no silver in this place?

Therefore, it is understandable that during the excavation process of Kravitz and others, many venomous snakes suddenly emerged from the wall, because this place itself is a trap.

"What should we do now?" Mu Ling asked.

Han Kongque said: "We can only use stupid methods and study carefully bit by bit to see which underground passage is the real passage and which one is fake. Only by finding the real passage can we point out the direction of the mausoleum."

Han Kongque was helpless. He wandered here for half a month and saw many ancient tombs, but these tombs could not be Genghis Khan's mausoleum, because neither the layout nor the burial objects were worthy of Genghis Khan's status.

Finally, Han Peacock discovered some ruined passages from some traces underground. Later, when he looked carefully, he found that such ruined passages were densely crisscrossed in this area of ​​dozens of kilometers underground. It could be said that they were everywhere.

All.

The most important thing is that under Han Kongque's spiritual awareness, the passage here actually goes more than 400 meters underground. This sight immediately frightened Han Kongque, because the amount of this project was really too large.

However, after studying the underground passages here for a long time, Han Peacock also made some discoveries, such as the tombs here and the underground passages.

Later, Han Kongque concluded that the underground passage was not actually completed by man. In other words, the criss-crossing passages below may have been formed naturally, or were formed by man-made natural disasters.

If this were not the case, then the following project would be too grand. Considering that the rise of Genghis Khan did not have a long history, Han Peacock believed that the passage here was naturally formed, because in terms of time and the national strength of Yuan and Mongolia at that time

, none of them have the strength to build such a project.

Of course, it is impossible for everything here to be naturally formed, because various signs show that some places are hundreds of meters underground and are filled with fill soil.

In other words, some places were filled up manually, but most places must have been silted out by floods.

Because Han Peacock saw many impact marks, vegetation, sand, gravel, and silt were the main themes underground. It was with these things that a flat grassland was finally formed here.

There are many tombs here, but they are located on natural hills. The valleys in the mountains, especially near the passages, have traces of artificial modification. The areas around these passages are full of traces of artificial landfills.

, so this place should have been artificially built, which eventually led to floods and alluvial erosion, and finally formed what it is now.

In this way, it is consistent with historical records, because Qi Nian Valley is difficult to walk in historical records. The reason why it is famous is because Genghis Khan's carriage was once trapped here.

The place on the grassland where the vehicle frame was stuck must be a watery and muddy place, so there should be no shortage of water around here. Only such a natural environment can lead to the filling of a large valley.

At this time, Han Peacock had already sketched out the picture of this place. In ancient times, this place was a mountainous valley dotted with hills. On the hills, leaders of the surrounding tribes throughout the ages were buried.

Later, Genghis Khan planned to use this place as his tomb, so he built a large number of passages in the valley. After the construction of these passages was completed, they were filled up.

In this way, year after year, day after day, layers of passages are constantly superimposed, and finally a maze of dense passages is formed around the hilltop.

When the maze was finally completed, the water conservancy project built with the help of engineering soil finally introduced floods here during the rainy season. I don’t know how many years later, the area was eventually alluvial into a plain, and finally a grassland was formed.

At this time, no one would know that there is a huge maze buried under this grassland, and the place where the maze ultimately leads is buried by history.

After Genghis Khan died, another group of people came, dug the passages in the underground labyrinth, and put Genghis Khan's body into his tomb.

The ancestor of Aunt Wang's husband, Liu Min's cousin, was one of these people. He escaped under Liu Min's cover.

And because this is not the real location of Genghis Khan's Mausoleum at all, some Yuan and Mongolian nobles were not silenced. This is probably the main reason why Liu Min survived, because the Bor family was not afraid that he could find Genghis Khan's Mausoleum.

.

Therefore, even if the entrance to Genghis Khan's mausoleum is known to everyone around the world, it is not that easy to dig out his financial reports.

Even if Han Peacock had the ability to accurately detect four hundred meters underground, he would not be able to find where the underground passage pointed.

Is it deeper underground, or the surrounding peaks?

No matter where it points in the end, Han Peacock needs to follow the passage, because there are too many mountain peaks around. If you search all over the mountains and plains for ancient tombs that don't know how deep they are buried underground, it will be like looking for a needle in a haystack.

If it is deeper underground, it is more necessary to enter the underground passage.

In fact, Korean Peacock prefers that Genghis Khan's mausoleum be buried in the surrounding peaks, because there are records of this in history.

According to relevant historical records, one day before his death, Genghis Khan once sat in meditation under an elm tree on Kent Mountain for a long time. Then he suddenly stood up and said to his entourage: "I will be buried here after I die."

The notebooks of literati in the Southern Song Dynasty also recorded that after Genghis Khan died of illness in Ningxia, his body was transported to a place under the Kent Mountains in Mobei, and a deep pit was dug on the surface for a secret burial.

His body was stored in a single wooden coffin. The so-called single wooden coffin was made by cutting a section of a big tree and hollowing out the middle to make a coffin.

After the single wooden coffin was buried, the tomb was backfilled with soil and then "trodden down by thousands of horses".

Because the Mongolians did not have a tradition of physical worship at that time, they believed that the human body came from nature, and should return to nature after death and be buried as soon as possible so that the soul can ascend to heaven.

Therefore, the silver coffin coffin enshrined in Genghis Khan's mausoleum contains the white male camel's mane, the soul adsorbent of Genghis Khan when he died, rather than Genghis Khan's remains.

In legends, during the Genghis Khan era, it is said that there was an artificially modified mountain in the Altay Mountains, and it is speculated that it may be the mausoleum where Genghis Khan was buried.

One of the evidences is that Marco Polo wrote in his Travels of Marco Polo: "On the way to transporting the monarch's coffin to the Altay Mountains, the escorts regarded all the people they met along the way as martyrs."

Of course, this is a legend. Even if there is such a big mountain, it is not certain whether it is in the Altay Mountains.

Whether the legends are true or not, if you want to say that they are all false, that is definitely wrong, because nothing can happen without smoke and fire. Therefore, Han Peacock has to judge which legends are true and which legends are false.

For example, the Qichao Valley and the Great Forbidden Land have been confirmed. For example, the artificial mountains may be true. For example, the trampling by thousands of horses must be true. However, it is not necessarily true whether it is to hide the buried traces, because Han

Peacock believes that this is to destroy the underground passage.

Han Kongque became suspicious of this when he saw the signs of collapse of the underground passage. Because the underground passage below was so completely destroyed, it was probably man-made.

Perhaps from the beginning of construction, Genghis Khan planned to destroy all the passages after his burial, so thousands of horses trampled them, causing earthquakes, or other sophisticated mechanisms. Anyway, according to the prior arrangements, the passage to Genghis Khan could be destroyed.

All the passages to the mausoleum are blocked.

Also, Yuan Meng's secret burial was definitely not just digging a hole casually and burying the body in a tree stump.

Therefore, the legendary burial method of Genghis Khan is quite ridiculous. This just proves that Genghis Khan had already prepared it, and he could only be buried quickly if he had a completed mausoleum, because he could just carry it in and seal the mausoleum.

Yes, emperors of all dynasties have done this, but Genghis Khan hid it better.

Therefore, Han Kongque was not afraid of trouble, because trouble meant that he was getting closer to the true image, so after seeing the completely destroyed underground passage underneath, Han Kongque knew that he had found the right place.

Of course, at this time, Han Kongque also knew that Kravitz must have known that he was in the right place, but he still gave up.

Maybe Kravitz didn't realize that this was just a passage at that time, but he did find the right point, but he didn't stick to it.

At that time, Kravitz believed that this cemetery was probably the tomb of Genghis Khan, but the excavation was not smooth.

At the beginning, there were strong winds and torrential rain. After more than a month of difficult excavation, Kravitz's archaeological team encountered a stone wall ten meters underground. The real bad luck came from this side.

Stonewall begins. To be continued.

...


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