Vitrified Forts
Posted: Mon May 11, 2026 1:50 am
Scotland, in the 19th C, was known for its vitrified forts but as researchers found; similar phenomena exists world wide:
Vitrification has been discovered in Australia, Easter Island, Pakistan, and other places around the world. Most of the locations are on hilltops. Of course, this would be a strategic location for a fort...also it is an ideal location for the strike of a massive electric discharge. Ordinary lightning can glassify lines in sand, but does not have the necessary power to achieve anywhere near what is observed on vitrified forts. When they were described in the late 18th C by Scottish geologist John Williams in his book The Mineral Kingdom it was suggested that they were volcanic in origin, or that the builders heated the rocks to fuse them, or that a conquering army burnt the fort. None of these explanations were viable.
The stones of these ancient forts have been subjected to extreme high temperatures such that rocks are completely or partially fused together. Some rock surfaces are glassified. Required temperatures for the effect are around 1500 degrees Celsius (2700 degrees Fahrenheit).
https://malagabay.wordpress.com/2016/05 ... -thinking/
https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/1911_Enc ... fied_FortsFor a long time it was supposed that these forts were peculiar to Scotland; but they are found also in Londonderry and Cavan, in Ireland; in Upper Lusatia, Bohemia, Silesia, Saxony and Thuringia; in the provinces on the Rhine, especially in the neighbourhood of the Nahe; in the Ucker Lake, in Brandenburg, where the walls are formed of burnt and smelted bricks; in Hungary; and in several places in France, such as Châteauvieux, Peran, La Courbe, Sainte Suzanne, Puy de Gaudy and Thauron. They have not been found in England or Wales.
Vitrification has been discovered in Australia, Easter Island, Pakistan, and other places around the world. Most of the locations are on hilltops. Of course, this would be a strategic location for a fort...also it is an ideal location for the strike of a massive electric discharge. Ordinary lightning can glassify lines in sand, but does not have the necessary power to achieve anywhere near what is observed on vitrified forts. When they were described in the late 18th C by Scottish geologist John Williams in his book The Mineral Kingdom it was suggested that they were volcanic in origin, or that the builders heated the rocks to fuse them, or that a conquering army burnt the fort. None of these explanations were viable.
The stones of these ancient forts have been subjected to extreme high temperatures such that rocks are completely or partially fused together. Some rock surfaces are glassified. Required temperatures for the effect are around 1500 degrees Celsius (2700 degrees Fahrenheit).
https://malagabay.wordpress.com/2016/05 ... -thinking/
https://www.thunderbolts.info/tpod/2008 ... jodaro.htmWhat could account for fields of broken glass shards like those in Egypt, large sheets of glass like “Darwin glass” from Australia, vitrified stone walls in Scotland and the fused pottery and melted ramparts of Mohenjo-Daro? In all these cases, it was probably gigantic plasma discharges in the form of lightning bolts and electric arcs that melted the ruins and fused the soils into glass. The timeframe is probably impossible to determine with any accuracy at this late date, but it seems evident that humanity had reached a high level of sophistication before being exposed to these cataclysmic events.