Sola Rey

Carved female image on a mountain in Guinea, West Africa

Some say it’s artificial and others think it’s a natural formation. Judge for your self.

I have seen websites and blogs on this subject from Russia, Asia and Latin America analyzing “The Lady Of Mali”. This is now a current tourist destination or for self proclaimed Indiana Jones types looking for adventure and the discovery of forgotten lost worlds.

 To finance expeditions like this cost a great deal, maybe thousands or millions of dollars. But hey, who cares right? Knowing who you are and where you come from as a human being is not important (Sarcasm). I personally think we should put this mystery to rest and do some thorough research on this matter -Sola

On a huge granite mountain, the half-portrait of a lady done in granite stone.

The size of this statue from top of the head until the middle of the torso is exactly 150 meters. So this is a real big question: Who might have been able to construct such a huge granite half-portrait on a mountain at least 10- to- 12,000 years ago?


The Italian geologist, Professor Angelo Pitoni (below), was on the spot. When He took these photos.

He checked the earth on the bottom of this mountain and his calculation was that this stone monument must have been done at least 10- to- 12,000 years ago.

But then we have the real big question: Who could have been able to do such a big stone monument? Even in our days it would be impossible, or it would cost so much money that it would never be able to be done.

Source: Klaus Donna interview. He is an Art Exhibition Curator for the Habsburg Haus of Austria.

In an interview with journalist Carmen Machado, Pitoni said that the statue is located to the north of the city of Conakry and close enough to the country’s border of Mali.

Guinea, officially the Republic of Guinea, is a country in West Africa. Formerly known as French Guinea, it is today sometimes called Guinea-Conakry to distinguish it from its neighbor Guinea-Bissau and Equatorial Guinea.

Population: 11.75 million. (2013 world bank)

Official Language: French

Point of Interest: Îles de Los, Conakry National Museum, More

Guinea, West African landscape below.

 Pitoni also said that there are caves in the area which contain very old mummies that are guarded by the locals.

http://us-africa.tripod.com/consulaatguinee/tour.html

During his adventures & excavations in Sierra Leone, geologist Angelo Pitoni was told of an old legend of a princess who did something wrong and god made her into stone.

– Klaus Dona

Other curious forgotten or unknown ancient structures on the West Coast of Africa below

 

Curious Ancient African Minerals

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