What do you think about this?
In the hills above the town of Visoko in Bosnia, there is a mountain shaped almost too perfectly. From a distance, its faces rise in flat, triangular slopes that meet at a point, and in 2005 a man named Semir Osmanagić looked at it and declared it was no mountain at all. He called it the Pyramid of the Sun, and claimed it was the largest human-made pyramid on Earth, older than the ones in Egypt by thousands of years.
The world’s archaeologists and geologists pushed back hard. They examined the hill and concluded it is a natural formation, a type of landform called a flatiron, shaped by geology and not by human hands. They warned that the digging was damaging a real, ancient settlement that sits on the same site.
And yet the story refuses to die. Osmanagić kept excavating, uncovered a network of tunnels beneath the valley, and turned Visoko into a destination that draws visitors from around the world who feel something there. Believers point to the strange angles, the flat stone surfaces, the sheer symmetry of the thing.
The truth may be far stranger than we have been told, not because a buried pyramid is hiding under that hill, but because of how badly people want one to be.
A natural mountain mistaken for a monument, or a real structure science is too cautious to admit? What do you think is under the hills of Visoko?





